Walkmycin B targets WalK (YycG), a histidine kinase essential for bacterial cell growth

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Abstract

The WalK (a histidine kinase)/WalR (a response regulator, aka YycG/YycF) two-component system is indispensable in the signal transduction pathway for the cell-wall metabolism of Bacillus subtilis and Staphylococcus aureus. The inhibitors directed against WalK would be expected to have a bactericidal effect. After we screened 1368 culture broths of Streptomyces sp. by a differential growth assay, walkmycin A, B and C, which were produced by strain MK632-100F11, were purified using silica-gel column chromatography and HPLC. In this paper, the chemical structure of the major product (walkmycin B) was determined to be di-anthracenone (C44H44Cl 2O14), which was very similar to BE40665A. MICs of walkmycin B against B. subtilis and S. aureus were 0.39 and 0.20 g ml 1, and IC 50 measurements against WalK were 1.6 and 5.7 M, respectively. To clarify the affinity between WalK and walkmycin B, surface plasmon resonance was measured to obtain the equilibrium dissociation constant, K D1, of 7.63 M at the higher affinity site of B. subtilis WalK. These results suggest that walkmycin B inhibits WalK autophosphorylation by binding to the WalK cytoplasmic domain. © 2010 Japan Antibiotics Research Association All rights reserved.

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Okada, A., Igarashi, M., Okajima, T., Kinoshita, N., Umekita, M., Sawa, R., … Utsumi, R. (2010). Walkmycin B targets WalK (YycG), a histidine kinase essential for bacterial cell growth. Journal of Antibiotics, 63(2), 89–94. https://doi.org/10.1038/ja.2009.128

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