4.5 Article

Interception of Epoxide ring to quorum sensing system in Enterococcus faecalis and Staphylococcus aureus

Journal

AMB EXPRESS
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1186/s13568-023-01633-9

Keywords

Enterococcus faecalis; Staphylococcus aureus; Quorum sensing; agr, fsr, Epoxide ring ADMET and Docking Studies.

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Quorum sensing inhibitors (QSI) are anti-virulence agents that disarm pathogens of their virulence rather than killing them. Ambuic acid and Synerazol, two epoxide compounds, have been found to efficiently block the quorum sensing systems in Gram-positive bacteria.
Quorum sensing inhibitor (QSI) has been attracting attention as anti-virulence agent which disarms pathogens of their virulence rather than killing them. QSI marking cyclic peptide-mediated QS in Gram-positive bacteria is an effective tool to overcome the crisis of antibiotic-dependent chemotherapy due to the emergence of drug resistance strain, e.g., methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and Vancomycin resistant Enterococci (VRE). From a semi-large-scale screening thus far carried out, two Epoxide compounds, Ambuic acid and Synerazol, have been found to efficiently block agr and fsr QS systems, suggesting that the Epoxide group is involved in the mode of action of these QSIs. To address this notion, known natural Epoxide compounds, Cerulenin and Fosfomycin were examined for QSI activity for the agr and fsr systems in addition to in silico and SAR studies. As a result, most of investigated Epoxide containing antibiotics correlatively interfere with QSI activity for the agr and fsr systems under sublethal concentrations.

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