Molecular mechanism of viomycin inhibition of peptide elongation in bacteria

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Abstract

Viomycin is a tuberactinomycin antibiotic essential for treating multidrug- resistant tuberculosis. It inhibits bacterial protein synthesis by blocking elongation factor G (EF-G) catalyzed translocation of messenger RNA on the ribosome. Here we have clarified the molecular aspects of viomycin inhibition of the elongating ribosome using pre-steadystate kinetics. We found that the probability of ribosome inhibition by viomycin depends on competition between viomycin and EF-G for binding to the pretranslocation ribosome, and that stable viomycin binding requires an A-site bound tRNA. Once bound, viomycin stalls the ribosome in a pretranslocation state for a minimum of ~45 s. This stalling time increases linearly with viomycin concentration. Viomycin inhibition also promotes futile cycles of GTP hydrolysis by EF-G. Finally, we have constructed a kinetic model for viomycin inhibition of EF-G catalyzed translocation, allowing for testable predictions of tuberactinomycin action in vivo and facilitating in-depth understanding of resistance development against this important class of antibiotics.

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Holm, M., Borg, A., Ehrenberg, M., & Sanyal, S. (2016). Molecular mechanism of viomycin inhibition of peptide elongation in bacteria. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 113(4), 978–983. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1517541113

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