Title
A new antibiotic selectively kills Gram-negative pathogens
Date Issued
19 December 2019
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Imai Y.
Meyer K.J.
Iinishi A.
Favre-Godal Q.
Green R.
Manuse S.
Caboni M.
Mori M.
Niles S.
Ghiglieri M.
Honrao C.
Ma X.
Guo J.J.
Makriyannis A.
Böhringer N.
Wuisan Z.G.
Kaur H.
Wu R.
Mateus A.
Typas A.
Savitski M.M.
Espinoza J.L.
O’Rourke A.
Nelson K.E.
Hiller S.
Noinaj N.
Schäberle T.F.
D’Onofrio A.
Lewis K.
Justus-Liebig-University of Giessen
Publisher(s)
Nature Research
Abstract
The current need for novel antibiotics is especially acute for drug-resistant Gram-negative pathogens1,2. These microorganisms have a highly restrictive permeability barrier, which limits the penetration of most compounds3,4. As a result, the last class of antibiotics that acted against Gram-negative bacteria was developed in the 1960s2. We reason that useful compounds can be found in bacteria that share similar requirements for antibiotics with humans, and focus on Photorhabdus symbionts of entomopathogenic nematode microbiomes. Here we report a new antibiotic that we name darobactin, which was obtained using a screen of Photorhabdus isolates. Darobactin is coded by a silent operon with little production under laboratory conditions, and is ribosomally synthesized. Darobactin has an unusual structure with two fused rings that form post-translationally. The compound is active against important Gram-negative pathogens both in vitro and in animal models of infection. Mutants that are resistant to darobactin map to BamA, an essential chaperone and translocator that folds outer membrane proteins. Our study suggests that bacterial symbionts of animals contain antibiotics that are particularly suitable for development into therapeutics.
Start page
459
End page
464
Volume
576
Issue
7787
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Farmacología, Farmacia
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85076000486
PubMed ID
Source
Nature
ISSN of the container
00280836
Sponsor(s)
Acknowledgements This work was supported by NIH grant P01 AI118687 to K.L. and K.E.N. A. Mateus was supported by a fellowship from the EMBL Interdisciplinary Postdoc (EI3POD) Programme under Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions COFUND (grant number 664726). S.H. was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation via the NFP 72 (407240_167125). N.N. was supported by NIH grants GM127896 and GM127884. We thank H. Goodrich-Blair for providing strains of Photorhabdus and Xenorhabdus; M. Kagan for help with isolating darobactin; the Northeastern University Barnett Institute MS Core Facility for access to its LC–MS resources; D. Baldisseri from Bruker Biospin Corporation for recording some of the NMR data of darobactin; N. Kurzawa for the help with the analysis of thermal proteome profiling data; W. Fowle for assistance with scanning electron microscopy experiments; Y. Su for assistance with the ITC experiments; and R. Machado for help with taxonomy of Photorhabdus.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus