A pathway-directed positive growth restoration assay to facilitate the discovery of lipid A and fatty acid biosynthesis inhibitors in Acinetobacter baumannii

10Citations
Citations of this article
31Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Acinetobacter baumannii ATCC 19606 can grow without lipooligosaccharide (LOS). Lack of LOS can result from disruption of the early lipid A biosynthetic pathway genes lpxA, lpxC or lpxD. Although LOS itself is not essential for growth of A. baumannii ATCC 19606, it was previously shown that depletion of the lipid A biosynthetic enzyme LpxK in cells inhibited growth due to the toxic accumulation of lipid A pathway intermediates. Growth of LpxK-depleted cells was restored by chemical inhibition of LOS biosynthesis using CHIR-090 (LpxC) and fatty acid biosynthesis using cerulenin (FabB/F) and pyridopyrimidine (acetyl-CoA-carboxylase). Here, we expand on this by showing that inhibition of enoyl-acyl carrier protein reductase (FabI), responsible for converting trans-2-enoyl-ACP into acyl-ACP during the fatty acid elongation cycle also restored growth during LpxK depletion. Inhibition of fatty acid biosynthesis during LpxK depletion rescued growth at 37C, but not at 30C, whereas rescue by LpxC inhibition was temperature independent. We exploited these observations to demonstrate proof of concept for a targeted medium-throughput growth restoration screening assay to identify small molecule inhibitors of LOS and fatty acid biosynthesis. The differential temperature dependence of fatty acid and LpxC inhibition provides a simple means by which to separate growth stimulating compounds by pathway. Targeted cell-based screening platforms such as this are important for faster identification of compounds inhibiting pathways of interest in antibacterial discovery for clinically relevant Gram-negative pathogens.

Figures

  • Fig 1. Schematic of predicted lipid A and FASII biosynthetic pathway in A. baumannii ATCC 19606.
  • Fig 2. Inhibition of enoyl-ACP reductase (FabI) rescues growth of A. baumannii under LpxK depletion conditions. Growth of JWK0013(pNOV044) was not observed under noninducing conditions (DMSO, 10 μL per disk, arrow represents revertant and loss of IPTG regulation); growth of JWK0013 (pNOV044) was restored in the presence of IPTG (10 μL @ 1 mM per disk); JWK0013(pNOV044) grew under noninducing conditions in the presence of pyridopyrimidine (10 μL @ 12.8 mg/mL per disk, ACC) and AFN-1252 (10 μL @ 3.2 mg/mL per disk, FabI) but not triclosan (10 μL @ 12.8 mg/mL per disk, FabI).
  • Fig 3. Inhibitors of fatty acid biosynthesis rescues growth of cells depleted for LpxK at 37˚C but not 30˚C. Growth of JWK0013(pNOV044) was not observed under noninducing conditions (DMSO, 10 μL per disk); growth of JWK0013(pNOV044) was restored in the presence of IPTG (10 μL @ 1 mM per disk) at 30 and 37˚C; JWK0013 (pNOV044) grew under noninducing conditions in the presence of CHIR-090 and Compound 1 (LpxC inhibitors, 10 μL @ 12.8 mg/mL) at 30 and 37˚C; JWK0013(pNOV044) grew under noninducing conditions in the presence of fatty acid inhibitors at 37˚C, but not 30˚C, including pyridopyrimidine (10 μL @ 12.8 mg/mL per disk, ACC) and AFN-1252 (10 μL @ 3.2 mg/ml per disk, FabI) and cerulenin (10 μL @ 12.8 mg/mL per disk, FabB/F).
  • Fig 4. 96-well growth restoration assay. A) Growth of JWK0013(pNOV044) was restored in the presence of LpxC inhibitors Compound 1 (32–128 μg/ mL) and CHIR-090 (1–64 μg/mL) and fatty acid inhibitors pyridopyrimidine (8–32 μg/mL), andrimid (0.25–128 μg/mL), and cerulenin (2–64 μg/mL). Growth restoration was defined as an increase in fluorescence of at least 2-fold above background in consecutive wells. This was repeated at least three times in duplicate with similar results. In this representative example, SABA-1 displayed growth rescue at 0 μg/mL (DMSO control) due to revertants as evident by the lack of dose response, and growth was not observed in the replicate plates. B) Growth of JWK0013(pNOV044) was not observed under noninducing conditions (DMSO, 10 μL per disk); growth of JWK0013(pNOV044) was restored in the presence of IPTG (10 μL @ 1mM per disk); JWK0013(pNOV044) grew under noninducing conditions in the presence of pyridopyrimidine (10 μL @ 12.8 mg/ml per disk, ACC) and andrimid (10 μL @ 12.8 mg/ml per disk, ACC) but growth was not restored in the presence of SABA analogs that lack MIC values (10 μL @ 12.8 mg/mL per disk, SABA-1, 2).

References Powered by Scopus

Challenges of antibacterial discovery

1047Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Colistin resistance in Acinetobacter baumannii is mediated by complete loss of lipopolysaccharide production

651Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Biosynthesis and export of bacterial lipopolysaccharides

552Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Cited by Powered by Scopus

Pushing the envelope: LPS modifications and their consequences

323Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Novel targets to develop new antibacterial agents and novel alternatives to antibacterial agents

101Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Countering gram-negative antibiotic resistance: Recent progress in disrupting the outer membrane with novel therapeutics

60Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Richie, D. L., Wang, L., Chan, H., De Pascale, G., Six, D. A., Wei, J. R., & Dean, C. R. (2018). A pathway-directed positive growth restoration assay to facilitate the discovery of lipid A and fatty acid biosynthesis inhibitors in Acinetobacter baumannii. PLoS ONE, 13(3). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0193851

Readers over time

‘18‘19‘20‘21‘22‘230481216

Readers' Seniority

Tooltip

PhD / Post grad / Masters / Doc 12

67%

Researcher 5

28%

Professor / Associate Prof. 1

6%

Readers' Discipline

Tooltip

Agricultural and Biological Sciences 8

38%

Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Bi... 5

24%

Immunology and Microbiology 5

24%

Chemistry 3

14%

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free
0