4.4 Article

Inhibition of Outer Membrane Proteases of the Omptin Family by Aprotinin

Journal

INFECTION AND IMMUNITY
Volume 83, Issue 6, Pages 2300-2311

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/IAI.00136-15

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [MOP-15551]
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council [RGPIN-217482]
  3. McGill Faculty of Medicine graduate fellowship

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Bacterial proteases are important virulence factors that inactivate host defense proteins and contribute to tissue destruction and bacterial dissemination. Outer membrane proteases of the omptin family, exemplified by Escherichia coli OmpT, are found in some Gram-negative bacteria. Omptins cleave a variety of substrates at the host-pathogen interface, including plasminogen and antimicrobial peptides. Multiple omptin substrates relevant to infection have been identified; nonetheless, an effective omptin inhibitor remains to be found. Here, we purified native CroP, the OmpT ortholog in the murine pathogen Citrobacter rodentium. Purified CroP was found to readily cleave both a synthetic fluorescence resonance energy transfer substrate and the murine cathelicidin-related antimicrobial peptide. In contrast, CroP was found to poorly activate plasminogen into active plasmin. Although classical protease inhibitors were ineffective against CroP activity, we found that the serine protease inhibitor aprotinin displays inhibitory potency in the micromolar range. Aprotinin was shown to act as a competitive inhibitor of CroP activity and to interfere with the cleavage of the murine cathelicidin-related antimicrobial peptide. Importantly, aprotinin was able to inhibit not only CroP but also Yersinia pestis Pla and, to a lesser extent, Escherichia coli OmpT. We propose a structural model of the aprotinin-omptin complex in which Lys(15) of aprotinin forms salt bridges with conserved negatively charged residues of the omptin active site.

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