4.7 Article

Salmonella enterica Infections Are Disrupted by Two Small Molecules That Accumulate within Phagosomes and Differentially Damage Bacterial Inner Membranes

期刊

MBIO
卷 13, 期 5, 页码 -

出版社

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/mbio.01790-22

关键词

amine substituted; antibacterial; anti-infective; Galleria mellonella; inner membrane; intracellular pathogen; intravesicular pathogen; lysosomal trapping; macrophage; Salmonella enterica

资金

  1. National Institutes of Health [AI151979, AI121365, AI139248]
  2. University of Colorado Boulder Libraries Open Access Fund

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Researchers have identified two small molecules that can enter bacterial cells by exploiting outer membrane damage, and use them to kill Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium. These compounds interact with Escherichia coli and have different mechanisms of antibacterial activity. This study highlights the ability of host innate immunity to facilitate the action of small molecules as antibiotics.
Gram-negative bacteria have a robust cell envelope that excludes or expels many antimicrobial agents. However, during infection, host soluble innate immune factors permeabilize the bacterial outer membrane. We identified two small molecules that exploit outer membrane damage to access the bacterial cell. In standard microbiological media, neither compound inhibited bacterial growth nor permeabilized bacterial outer membranes. In contrast, at micromolar concentrations, JAV1 and JAV2 enabled the killing of an intracellular human pathogen, Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium. S. Typhimurium is a Gram-negative bacterium that resides within phagosomes of cells from the monocyte lineage. Under broth conditions that destabilized the lipopolysaccharide layer, JAV2 permeabilized the bacterial inner membrane and was rapidly bactericidal. In contrast, JAV1 activity was more subtle: JAV1 increased membrane fluidity, altered reduction potential, and required more time than JAW to disrupt the inner membrane barrier and kill bacteria. Both compounds interacted with glycerophospholipids from Escherichia coli total lipid extract-based liposomes. JAV1 preferentially interacted with cardiolipin and partially relied on cardiolipin production for activity, whereas JAW generally interacted with lipids and had modest affinity for phosphatidylglycerol. In mammalian cells, neither compound significantly altered mitochondria! membrane potential at concentrations that killed S. Typhimurium. Instead, JAV1 and JAW became trapped within acidic compartments, including macrophage phagosomes. Both compounds improved survival of S. Typhimurium-infected Galeria mellonella larvae. Together, these data demonstrate that JAV1 and JAV2 disrupt bacterial inner membranes by distinct mechanisms and highlight how small, lipophilic, amine-substituted molecules can exploit host soluble innate immunity to facilitate the killing of intravesicular pathogens. IMPORTANCE Innovative strategies for developing new antimicrobials are needed. Combining our knowledge of host-pathogen interactions and relevant drug characteristics has the potential to reveal new approaches to treating infection. We identified two compounds with antibacterial activity specific to infection and with limited host cell toxicity. These compounds appeared to exploit host innate immunity to access the bacterium and differentially damage the bacterial inner membrane. Further, both compounds accumulated within Salmonella-containing and other acidic vesicles, a process known as lysosomal trapping, which protects the host and harms the pathogen. The compounds also increased host survival in an insect infection model. This work highlights the ability of host innate immunity to enable small molecules to act as antibiotics and demonstrates the feasibility of antimicrobial targeting of the inner membrane. Additionally, this study features the potential use of lysosomal trapping to enhance the activities of compounds against intravesicular pathogens.

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