4.4 Article

Crystal Structures of Covalent Complexes of β-Lactam Antibiotics with Escherichia coli Penicillin-Binding Protein 5: Toward an Understanding of Antibiotic Specificity

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 49, Issue 37, Pages 8094-8104

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/bi100879m

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM66861, AI36901, AI17986]
  2. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [W-31-109-ENG-38]
  3. Medical University of South Carolina
  4. Office Of The Director
  5. EPSCoR [919440] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs) are the molecular targets for the widely used beta-lactam class of antibiotics, but how these compounds act at the molecular level is not fully understood. We have determined crystal structures of Escherichia PBP 5 as covalent complexes with imipenem, cloxacillin, and cefoxitin. These antibiotics exhibit very different second-order rates of acylation for the enzyme. In all three structures, there is excellent electron density for the central portion of the beta-lactam, but weak or absent density for the RI or R2 side chains. Areas of contact between the antibiotics and PBP 5 do not correlate with the rates of acylation. The same is true for conformational changes, because although a shift of a loop leading to an electrostatic interaction between Arg248 and the beta-lactam carboxylate, which occurs completely with cefoxitin and partially with imipenem and is absent with cloxacillin, is consistent with the different rates of acylation, mutagenesis of Arg248 decreased the level of cefoxitin acylation only 2-fold. Together, these data suggest that structures of postcovalent complexes of PBP 5 are unlikely to be useful vehicles for the design of new covalent inhibitors of PBPs. Finally, superimposition of the imipenem-acylated complex with PBP Sin complex with a boronic acid peptidomimetic shows that the position corresponding to the hydrolytic water molecule is occluded by the ring nitrogen of the beta-lactam. Because the ring nitrogen occupies a similar position in all three complexes, this supports the hypothesis that deacylation is blocked by the continued presence of the leaving group after opening of the beta-lactam ring.

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