Yizhen Jin, Sadhan Jana, Mikail E. Abbasov, Hening Lin
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The emergence of antibiotic resistance necessitates the discovery of novel bacterial targets and antimicrobial agents. Here, we present a bacterial target discovery framework that integrates phenotypic screening of cysteine-reactive fragments with competitive activity-based protein profiling to map and functionally characterize the targets of screening hits. Using this approach, we identify β-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein synthase III (FabH) and MiaA tRNA prenyltransferase as primary targets of a hit fragment, 10-F05, that confer bacterial stress resistance and virulence in Shigella flexneri. Mechanistic investigations elucidate that covalent C112 modification in FabH, an enzyme involved in bacterial fatty acid synthesis, results in its inactivation and consequent growth inhibition. We further demonstrate that irreversible C273 modification at the MiaA RNA-protein interaction interface abrogates substrate tRNA binding, attenuating resistance and virulence through decreased translational accuracy. Our findings underscore the efficacy of integrating phenotypic and activity-based profiling of electrophilic fragments to accelerate the identification and pharmacologic validation of new therapeutic targets.
Cell Chemical BiologyBiochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology-Molecular Medicine
CiteScore
14.70
自引率
2.30%
发文量
143
期刊介绍:
Cell Chemical Biology, a Cell Press journal established in 1994 as Chemistry & Biology, focuses on publishing crucial advances in chemical biology research with broad appeal to our diverse community, spanning basic scientists to clinicians. Pioneering investigations at the chemistry-biology interface, the journal fosters collaboration between these disciplines. We encourage submissions providing significant conceptual advancements of broad interest across chemical, biological, clinical, and related fields. Particularly sought are articles utilizing chemical tools to perturb, visualize, and measure biological systems, offering unique insights into molecular mechanisms, disease biology, and therapeutics.