Open Access Article
Phoom
Chairatana
,
Tengfei
Zheng
and
Elizabeth M.
Nolan
*
Department of Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. E-mail: lnolan@mit.edu; Fax: +1-617-324-0505; Tel: +1-617-452-2495
First published on 22nd May 2015
New antibiotics are required to treat bacterial infections and counteract the emergence of antibiotic resistance. Pathogen-specific antibiotics have several advantages over broad-spectrum drugs, which include minimal perturbation to the commensal microbiota. We present a strategy for targeting antibiotics to bacterial pathogens that utilises the salmochelin-mediated iron uptake machinery of Gram-negative Escherichia coli. Salmochelins are C-glucosylated derivatives of the siderophore enterobactin. The biosynthesis and utilisation of salmochelins are important for virulence because these siderophores allow pathogens to acquire iron and evade the enterobactin-scavenging host-defense protein lipocalin-2. Inspired by the salmochelins, we report the design and chemoenzymatic preparation of glucosylated enterobactin–β-lactam conjugates that harbour the antibiotics ampicillin (Amp) and amoxicillin (Amx), hereafter GlcEnt–Amp/Amx. The GlcEnt scaffolds are based on mono- and diglucosylated Ent where one catechol moiety is functionalized at the C5 position for antibiotic attachment. We demonstrate that GlcEnt–Amp/Amx provide up to 1000-fold enhanced antimicrobial activity against uropathogenic E. coli relative to the parent β-lactams. Moreover, GlcEnt–Amp/Amx based on a diglucosylated Ent (DGE) platform selectively kill uropathogenic E. coli that express the salmochelin receptor IroN in the presence of non-pathogenic E. coli and other bacterial strains that include the commensal microbe Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG. Moreover, GlcEnt–Amp/Amx evade the host-defense protein lipocalin-2, and exhibit low toxicity to mammalian cells. Our work establishes that siderophore–antibiotic conjugates provide a strategy for targeting virulence, narrowing the activity spectrum of antibiotics in clinical use, and achieving selective delivery of antibacterial cargos to pathogenic bacteria on the basis of siderophore receptor expression.
Iron is an essential nutrient for almost all bacterial pathogens.10,11 Because iron exhibits low solubility in aqueous solutions at physiological pH and enables Fenton chemistry, the levels of “free” iron in mammals (ca. 10−24 M in serum)12 are tightly regulated by homeostatic mechanisms, which include the expression of the iron transport and storage proteins transferrin and ferritin.13 Most bacterial pathogens require micromolar concentrations of iron to colonise and cause disease, and bacterial iron acquisition machineries contribute to virulence.10,14
One way that bacteria scavenge iron in the host environment is to biosynthesize and export siderophores, secondary metabolites that chelate Fe(III) with high affinity.15 The ferric siderophores are recognised and transported into the cell by dedicated uptake machinery. In this work, we consider the catecholate siderophore enterobactin 1 (Ent, Fig. 1a), its glucosylated congeners 2–4 (GlcEnt, Fig. 1a), and the outer membrane receptors for these iron chelators. Ent is biosynthesized by all E. coli and the ferric complex is transported across the outer membrane by the TonB–ExbB–ExbD-dependent outer membrane receptor FepA (Fig. 1b).12 In addition to Ent, many pathogenic E. coli as well as Salmonella spp. biosynthesize salmochelins, C-glucosylated derivatives of Ent (Fig. 1a).16 The iroA gene cluster (iroBCDEN)14,17,18 encodes enzymes that tailor the Ent scaffold to provide the salmochelins (IroBDE), and proteins for salmochelin transport (IroCN). Expression of genes encoded by the iroA locus contributes to virulence by providing Gram-negative pathogens with additional iron acquisition machinery and enabling the pathogens to overcome the host innate immune response.19,20 In the battle against such invading pathogens, the mammalian host mounts a metal-withholding response and secretes lipocalin-2 (Lcn2), a 22 kDa antimicrobial protein that captures ferric Ent.19,21,22 Gram-negative pathogens that utilise salmochelins for iron acquisition readily evade this innate immune mechanism because the salmochelins cannot be sequestered by Lcn2.19
Because bacteria utilise siderophores to acquire nutrient iron during infection, these molecules, as well as the corresponding biosynthetic and transport machineries, provide opportunities for antibiotic development.10,11,23–27 The notion of using siderophores or siderophore mimics to deliver antibacterial cargo into bacterial cells has garnered attention over several decades.28–44 Our approach to siderophore-based targeting focuses on harnessing native siderophore platforms used by pathogens in the human host for cargo delivery, and we seek to modify these scaffolds in ways that minimally perturb iron binding and receptor recognition. We have designed and utilised a monofunctionalized Ent platform to assemble a variety of Ent–cargo conjugates, and we reported that the Ent uptake machinery (FepABCDG) provides a means to transport small-molecule cargo, including antibiotics in clinical use, into E. coli.44,45 For instance, the Ent–β-lactam conjugates 5 and 6 (Fig. 1c) target and kill E. coli expressing FepA.44 Because all E. coli use Ent for iron acquisition, the Ent–β-lactam conjugates target and kill both non-pathogenic and pathogenic E. coli strains. Some E. coli are commensal microbes, comprising <1% of the total microbial community in the human gut, that biosynthesize vitamin K that is needed by the host.46,47 Thus, the ability to target pathogenic E. coli has utility for minimally perturbing the normal flora. Inspired by prior investigations of native siderophore transport,16,48 we hypothesised that salmochelin–antibiotic conjugates will be specifically recognised by IroN, the outer membrane receptor for the salmochelins, and afford a strategy for overcoming the outer membrane permeability barrier, achieving narrow-spectrum antibacterial activity against pathogenic E. coli, and evading capture by Lcn2.
In this work, we report the design and chemoenzymatic preparation of siderophore–β-lactam conjugates based on salmochelin platforms, and demonstrate targeting of β-lactam antibiotics to pathogenic E. coli that harbour the iroA gene cluster and express IroN. Salmochelin-inspired GlcEnt–β-lactam conjugates based on the diglucosylated Ent (DGE, Fig. 1a) platform provide selective antibacterial activity against pathogenic E. coli and up to 1000-fold enhanced potency relative to the parent β-lactam antibiotics. Moreover, the salmochelin–inspired conjugates remain antibacterial in the presence of Lcn2. These investigations establish a chemoenzymatic route to functionalized salmochelins and provide a new approach for transforming a broad-spectrum antibiotic in clinical use into a narrow-spectrum therapeutic that targets microbial pathogens on the basis of siderophore receptor expression.
IroB and MceC are C-glucosyltransferases that catalyse C-glucosylation of Ent at the C5 positions of the catechol rings. MceC is encoded by the MccE492 gene cluster of K. pneumoniae RYC492, and has 75% amino acid sequence identity with IroB.50 IroB catalyses up to three C-glucosylation events, affording MGE, DGE and TGE as products (Fig. 1a).51 MceC, in contrast, produces only MGE and DGE.52 On the basis of these observations, we hypothesised that both IroB and MceC would accept monofunctionalized Ent as a substrate, providing a preparative route to 7–10. Initial activity assays where either IroB or MceC was incubated with Ent-PEG3-N311, UDP-Glc, and Mg(II) revealed that both enzymes accept Ent-PEG3-N311 as a substrate and afford MGE-PEG3-N312 and DGE-PEG3-N313 as products (Fig. S1 and S2†). Accumulation of 12 was observed in the MceC-catalysed reactions, whereas 13 accumulated in reactions catalysed by IroB. When Ent–Amp/Amx 5 and 6 were employed as substrates, complex product mixtures were obtained. LC/MS analysis of the mixtures revealed the desired products as well as multiple byproducts, including products of β-lactam decomposition. We therefore performed large-scale C-glucosylation reactions employing Ent-PEG3-N311 as a substrate to afford milligram quantities of MGE-PEG3-N312, and DGE-PEG3-N313 (Scheme 1). We subsequently employed copper-catalysed azide/alkyne cycloaddition to install the β-lactam moieties (Scheme 1).44 This route achieved the mono- and diglucosylated conjugates 7–10 in high purity and in yields of 26–59% from 7 following HPLC purification. As expected, the GlcEnt–β-lactam conjugates 7–10 bind iron.53 Each Fe(III) complex exhibits a broad absorption band (ca. 400–700 nm, MeOH) characteristic of ferric Ent and its derivatives (Fig. S3†).44,45,54
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| Scheme 1 Chemoenzymatic syntheses of GlcEnt–Amp/Amx 7–10. The synthetic route consists of MceC- or IroB-catalysed glucosylation of Ent-PGE3-N311 followed by a copper-catalysed click reaction to achieve the GlcEnt–β-lactam conjugates 7–10. We abbreviate the siderophore family 1–4 (Fig. 1a) as (Glc)Ent and the siderophore–β-lactam conjugates 5–10 as (Glc)Ent–Amp/Amx. | ||
55 and UTI89
56 harbour the iroA gene cluster, biosynthesize and utilise salmochelins for iron acquisition in the host, and cause urinary tract infections.57,58 In contrast, E. coli H9049 is a clinical isolate that does not have the iroA cluster.22E. coli K-12
59 and E. coli B
60 are non-pathogenic laboratory strains that also lack the iroA cluster. To ascertain the effect of iron limitation on antibacterial activity, we performed antibacterial activity assays in the absence or presence of the metal-ion chelator 2,2′-dipyridyl (DP, 200 μM). This concentration of DP inhibits E. coli growth (Fig. S4†). These assays revealed that DGE–Amp/Amx 9 and 10 target pathogenic E. coli that express IroN.
Amp/Amx exhibit minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) values of 10 μM against the five E. coli strains (±DP, Fig. 2 and S5–S9†). Under conditions of iron limitation, Ent–Amp/Amx provide 100- to 1000-fold enhanced activity against all five strains (50% MHB, +DP). These results are in agreement with our prior studies of Ent–Amp/Amx killing of E. coli.44 Glucosylation affords strain-dependent antimicrobial activity that correlates with IroN expression (Fig. 2a and b, S5 and S6†). Like Ent–Amp/Amx 5 and 6, GlcEnt–Amp/Amx 7–10 provide 100- and 1000-fold enhanced antimicrobial activity against E. coli UTI89 and E. coli CFT073, respectively (+DP). The susceptibility of E. coli CFT073 to GlcEnt–Amp/Amx remains enhanced in the absence of DP, as observed previously for Ent–Amp/Amx.44 The antibacterial activity of GlcEnt–Amp/Amx 7–10 against E. coli H9049, K-12, and B is attenuated relative to that of Ent–Amp/Amx 5 and 6 (+DP, Fig. 2c–e and S7–S9†). Moreover, for these non-pathogenic strains, the MIC values of (Glc)Ent–Amp/Amx follow the trend Ent–Amp/Amx < MGE–Amp/Amx < DGE–Amp/Amx. The MGE modification provides enhanced potency relative to Amp/Amx because growth reduction (K-12) or complete growth inhibition (H9049 and B) occurs at 1 μM MGE–Amp/Amx (+DP). In contrast, the DGE–β-lactam conjugates exhibit negligible antibacterial activity against the three strains that lack IroN (MIC > 10 μM). The growth medium contains ≈4 μM iron (Table S2†) and we attribute the growth inhibition observed at 10 μM DGE–Amp/Amx to iron deprivation that results from DGE–Amp/Amx sequestering the iron in the growth medium (Table S2†).
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| Fig. 2 Antibacterial activity of (Glc)Ent–Amp against five E. coli strains. (a)–(e) Antibacterial activity of (Glc)Ent–Amp 5/7/9 against (a) uropathogenic E. coli CFT073, (b) uropathogenic E. coli UTI89, (c) non-pathogenic clinical isolate E. coli H9049, (d) laboratory strain E. coli K-12, (e) laboratory strain E. coli B. All assays were performed in 50% MHB medium supplemented with 200 μM DP (t = 19 h, T = 30 °C) (mean ± standard deviation, n ≥ 3). The data for (Glc)Ent–Amx 6/8/10 and for the assays performed in the absence of DP are presented in Fig. S5–S9.† | ||
In the antibacterial activity assays described above, we treated the bacterial cultures with the apo conjugates and expected that the siderophore moieties chelate iron from the growth medium, allowing for recognition of the ferric–siderophore complexes by FepA and IroN. We previously reported that preloading of Ent–Amp/Amx with Fe(III) prior to antibacterial activity assays against E. coli K-12 had negligible effect on the MIC value.44 Here we report that preloading of MGE–Amp/Amx and DGE–Amp/Amx also has a negligible effect on the growth inhibitory properties (Fig. S10†). This result is expected given that the concentration of iron in the growth medium far exceeds the MIC values obtained for the conjugates under conditions where FepA and IroN are expressed. Lastly, mixtures of unmodified Amp/Amx and (Glc)Ent 1–3 against E. coli CFT073 and UTI89 provide the same MIC values as Amp/Amx alone and confirm that the enhanced antibacterial activity of (Glc)Ent–Amp/Amx 5–10 requires the covalent attachment of β-lactams to the siderophore scaffolds (Fig. S11 and S12†).
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| Fig. 3 Time-kill kinetics of (Glc)Ent–Amp against E. coli CFT073 and UTI89. (a and b) Time-kill kinetics of (Glc)Ent–Amp 5/7/9 against (a) uropathogenic E. coli CFT073 (≈108 CFU mL−1) treated with 50 μM Amp or 5 μM (Glc)Ent–Amp 5/7/9 and (b) uropathogenic E. coli UIT89 (≈108 CFU mL−1) treated with 50 μM Amp or 50 μM (Glc)Ent–Amp 5/7/9. All assays were performed in 50% MHB medium supplemented with 200 μM DP (T = 37 °C) (mean ± standard deviation, n ≥ 3). The data for (Glc)Ent–Amx 6/8/10 and for the assays performed in the absence of DP are presented in Fig. S13–S14.† | ||
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| Fig. 4 Exogenous (Glc)Ent compete with (Glc)Ent–Amp conjugates for FepA and IroN recognition. (a)–(c) Growth of E. coli CFT073 in the presence of 100 nM (Glc)Ent–Amp 5/7/9 and mixtures of 100 nM (Glc)Ent–Amp 5/7/9 and 1, 5, 20, or 100 equiv of exogenous (a) Ent 1, (b) MGE 2, or (c) DGE 3 in the presence of 200 μM DP. (d)–(f) Growth of E. coli UTI89 in the presence of 100 nM (Glc)Ent–Amp 5/7/9 and mixtures of 100 nM (Glc)Ent–Amp 5/7/9 and 1, 5, 20, or 100 equiv of exogenous (d) Ent 1, (e) MGE 2, or (f) DGE 3 in the presence of 200 μM DP. All assays were performed in 50% MHB medium (t = 19 h, T = 30 °C) (mean ± standard deviation, n = 3). An asterisk indicates OD600 < 0.01. The data for (Glc)Ent–Amx 6/8/10 are presented in Fig. S15.† | ||
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Fig. 5 MGE/DGE–Amp selectively kill uropathogenic E. coli in the presence of non-pathogenic E. coli K-12 and the probiotic L. rhamnosus GG. (a and b) Bacterial growth monitored by (a) OD600 and (b) CFU mL−1 for cultures of E. coli K-12 only, CFT073 only, and 1 : 1 K-12/CFT073 mixtures treated with 100 nM Amp or 100 nM (Glc)Ent–Amp 5/7/9 in the presence of 200 μM DP. (c and d) Bacterial growth monitored by (c) OD600 and (d) CFU mL−1 for cultures of E. coli K-12 only, UTI89 only, and 1 : 1 K-12/UTI89 mixtures treated with 100 nM Amp or 100 nM (Glc)Ent–Amp 5/7/9 in the presence of 200 μM DP. (e and f) Bacterial growth monitored by (e) OD600 and (f) CFU mL−1 for cultures of L. rhamnosus GG only, E. coli CFT073 only, and 1 : 1 L. rhamnosus GG/E. coli CFT073 mixtures treated with 1 μM Amp or 1 μM (Glc)Ent–Amp 5/7/9 in the presence of 200 μM DP. All mixed-E. coli antimicrobial assays were performed in 50% MHB medium and all mixed-species antimicrobial assays were conducted in 1 : 1 MRS/MHB medium (t = 19 h, T = 30 °C) (mean ± standard deviation, n = 3). An asterisk indicates OD600 < 0.01 or no colony formation. The data for (Glc)Ent–Amx 6/8/10 are presented in Fig. S16.† | ||
(Glc)Ent–Amp/Amx 5–10 also target pathogenic E. coli in the presence of commensal microbes. Lactobacilli are Gram-positive commensal bacteria of the human gastrointestinal tract, and are also found in the urinary and genital tracts.61 Some Lactobacilli reduce recurrent urinary tract infections in women.62 Lactobacilli have little-to-no minimal metabolic iron requirement, and do not employ enterobactin or salmochelins for iron acquisition.63,64Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG (ATCC 53103), a human commensal that is considered to be a probiotic, is susceptible to β-lactam antibiotics, and we obtained a MIC value of 10 μM for Amp/Amx against this strain (1
:
1 MRS/MHB medium, ±DP) (Fig. S17†). In contrast, 10 μM (Glc)Ent–Amp/Amx 5–10 have negligible effect on L. rhamnosus GG growth (Fig. S17†). Treatment of E. coli CFT073 and L. rhamnosus GG co-cultures with (Glc)Ent–Amp/Amx 5–10 affords selective killing of E. coli CFT073 (Fig. 5e and f, S16e and f†).
We previously reported that modification of Amp/Amx with Ent attenuated the activity of the β-lactam against Staphylococcus aureus ATCC 25923.44 In the current work we obtained a similar result with GlcEnt–Amp/Amx, and found that the salmochelin modification lowers the antibacterial activity of Amp/Amx against S. aureus by 10-fold (Fig. S18†). Moreover, treatment of E. coli CFT073 and S. aureus co-cultures with DGE–Amp/Amx 9,10 affords selective killing of E. coli CFT073 (Fig. S19a and b, S20a and b†). Selective killing of E. coli CFT073 co-cultured with Acinetobacter baumannii ATCC 17961 also occurred (Fig. S19c and d, S20c and d, S21†). Substitution of E. coli CFT073 with UTI89 in these assays afforded similar selectivity trends (Fig. S22 and S23†). In total, the mixed-species assays provide support for DGE-based targeting of the antibacterial cargo to IroN-expressing strains.
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| Fig. 6 Antibacterial activity of (Glc)Ent–Amp/Amx against E. coli CFT073 in the presence of Lcn2 or bovine serum albumin (BSA). E. coli CFT073 was treated with (a) 100 nM (Glc)Ent–Amp 5/7/9 or (b) 100 nM (Glc)Ent–Amx 6/8/10 in the absence (control) and presence of 1 μM Lcn2 or 1 μM BSA. The assays were conducted in modified M9 medium (t = 24 h, T = 37 °C) (mean ± standard deviation, n = 3). An asterisk indicates OD600 < 0.01. The data for the conjugates preloaded with Fe(III) are presented in Fig. S24.† | ||
IroN was first discovered in Salmonella18 and subsequently identified in other Enterobacteriaceae. Our current work focuses on antibiotic delivery to uropathogenic E. coli that harbour the iroA gene cluster, and we expect that this strategy will be applicable to other pathogens that employ salmochelins for iron acquisition. At present, 121 completely sequenced E. coli genomes are available, which include 46 human pathogens. A BLAST search using iroN from E. coli CFT073 afforded hits with ≥99% sequence identity for three uropathogenic E. coli (UTI89, 536, and 83792), adherent invasive E. coli UM146, the meningitis isolate E. coli IHE3034, and a carbapenemase-producing isolate E. coli ECONIH1 (Table S4†). The probiotic E. coli Nissle 1917 and the laboratory reference strain for antimicrobial testing E. coli ATCC 25922 were the only other E. coli revealed as hits. Studies of the distribution of siderophore biosynthetic machinery in E. coli isolated from feces of healthy mammals indicate that ≈20% of the commensal isolates produce salmochelins.68 This observation suggests that one potential limitation of GlcEnt-based antibiotic delivery is that a fraction of commensal E. coli harbour the iroA cluster are susceptible and, conversely, that some pathogenic E. coli do not. Regarding the former possibility, the healthy gut is considered to be a reservoir for E. coli that cause infections of the urinary tract,58,69–71 and the ability to target such pathobionts using siderophores may be advantageous in certain cases. In addition to Salmonella and E. coli, BLAST revealed that the genomes of the human pathogens Shigella dysenteriae 1617 and Sd197, Enterobacter cloacae, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Enterobacter aerogenes encode iroN (Table S4†). Thus, it will be informative to determine whether DGE also provides targeted antibiotic delivery to these problematic strains.
Our current investigations also provide fundamental insights into siderophore recognition and transport. Prior studies of siderophore uptake in Salmonella revealed that both FepA and IroN recognise and transport Ent.72 Our competition assays employing uropathogenic E. coli are in agreement with this observation, and indicate that both receptors deliver Ent–Amp/Amx 5 and 6 into E. coli. Moreover, our competition data suggest that MGE 2 and MGE–Amp/Amx 7 and 8 are recognised and transported by FepA as well as IroN of E. coli. In contrast, DGE 3 only competes with GlcEnt–Amp/Amx 7–10 and most effectively blocks the activity of DGE–Amp/Amx 9 and 10. These observations support exclusive transport of DGE–Amp/Amx 9 and 10 through IroN. Indeed, prior studies demonstrated that IroN is required for transporting salmochelin extracts isolated from several S. enterica strains,16 and in vitro activity assays reveal that IroB accumulates DGE 3.51
We previously reported that E. coli CFT073 exhibits greater sensitivity to Ent–Amp/Amx 5 and 6 than E. coli UTI89,44 and we observe the same trend with GlcEnt–Amp/Amx 7–10. The physiological origins of this observation remain unclear. One possible explanation may be differences in the siderophore biosynthetic and uptake machineries employed by these two uropathogens. E. coli CFT073 expresses a third catecholate siderophore receptor, IhA,73 whereas E. coli UTI89 biosynthesizes yersiniabactin, a siderophore mainly used by Yersinia spp.74 Alternatively, as-yet unidentified factors may account for these trends, and further studies are warranted to understand these observations.
In closing, this investigation establishes that siderophores and the siderophore uptake machinery employed by virulent bacteria provide a powerful approach for targeting pathogenesis in the context of antibacterial drug discovery. Narrow-spectrum and species-specific antibiotics are needed for treating infections where the causative agent is known and, when coupled with rapid diagnostics, will ultimately reduce the onset of secondary infections and evolution of antibiotic resistance.2,5,7 The current study focuses on targeting broad-spectrum β-lactam antibiotics to pathogenic E. coli on the basis of iron acquisition machinery that is employed by these pathogens during colonisation in the host. We establish that native salmochelins can be used as scaffolds for “Trojan horse” antibiotic delivery to hijack the iron acquisition machinery that contributes to pathogenicity. It will be important to ascertain whether this salmochelin–inspired strategy is applicable to other Gram-negatives, such as Salmonella and K. pneumoniae, which cause human disease and utilise salmochelins for iron acquisition. Leveraging this strategy to target other antibacterial cargos and thereby modulate activity and mitigate off-target effects is another important avenue of future chemical and biological investigation.
44 are reported elsewhere.
:
1 MeCN/H2O and an aliquot was taken for HPLC analysis. The remaining solution was subsequently lyophilized.
High-resolution mass spectrometry was performed by using an Agilent LC-MS system comprised of an Agilent 1260 series LC system outfitted with an Agilent Poroshell 120 EC-C18 column (2.7 μm pore size) and an Agilent 6230 TOF system housing an Agilent Jetstream ESI source. For all LC-MS analyses, solvent A was 0.1% formic acid/H2O and solvent B was 0.1% formic acid/MeCN (LC-MS grade, Sigma-Aldrich). The samples were analysed using a solvent gradient of 5–95% B over 10 min with a flow rate of 0.4 mL min−1. The MS profiles were analysed and deconvoluted by using Agilent Technologies Quantitative Analysis 2009 software version B.03.02.
Optical absorption spectra were recorded on a Beckman Coulter DU800 spectrophotometer (1 cm quartz cuvettes, Starna). A BioTek Synergy HT plate reader was used to record absorbance at 600 nm (OD600) for antimicrobial activity assays and absorbance at 550 nm for cytotoxicity assays.
000 rpm × 10 min, 4 °C), and analysed by HPLC (0–100% B over 30 min, 1 mL min−1). The results are shown in Fig. S1 and S2.†
:
1 MeCN/water and centrifuged (13
000 rpm × 10 min, 4 °C). MGE-PEG3-N312 and DGE-PEG3-N313 were purified from the supernatants of MceC- and IroB-catalysed reactions, respectively, by using semi-preparative HPLC (20–45% B over 8.5 min, 4 mL min−1). Both compounds were obtained as white powders (MGE-PEG3-N312, 0.66 mg, 41% from MceC-catalyzed reaction; DGE-PEG3-N313, 0.85 mg, 45% from IroB-catalysed reaction). HRMS (ESI): MGE-PEG3-N312, [M + H]+m/z calcd. 1076.3215, found 1076.3214; DGE-PEG3-N313, [M + H]+m/z calcd. 1238.3743, found 1238.3744. The analytical HPLC traces of the purified compounds are reported in Fig. S26 and S27.†
LB, MRS, 5× M9 minimal medium and agar were purchased from BD. Mueller Hinton Broth (MHB) was purchased from Fluka. Recombinant human Lcn2 was purchased from R&D System (Minneapolis, MN). The iron chelator 2,2′-dipyridyl (DP) was purchased from Sigma-Aldrich. All growth medium and Milli-Q water used for bacterial cultures or for preparing solutions of the enterobactin–antibiotic conjugates were sterilised by using an autoclave. A DP stock solution (200 mM) was prepared in DMSO and used in the bacteria growth assays requiring iron-depleted conditions. Working dilutions of the siderophore and siderophore–antibiotic conjugate stock solutions were prepared in 10% DMSO/H2O. For all assays, the final cultures contained 1% v/v DMSO. Sterile polypropylene culture tubes and sterile polystyrene 96-well plates used for culturing were purchased from VWR and Corning Incorporated, respectively. The optical density at 600 nm (OD600) was recorded on a Beckman Coulter DU800 spectrophotometer or by using a BioTek Synergy HT plate reader.
:
100 into 5 mL of fresh LB medium containing DP (200 μM) and incubated at 37 °C with shaking at 150 rpm until OD600 reached 0.6. The cultures were subsequently diluted to an OD600 value of 0.001 using 50% MHB medium (11.5 g L−1). A 90 μL aliquot of the diluted culture was combined with a 10 μL aliquot of a 10× solution of DP (0, 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2, 4, and 8 mM) in a 96-well plate, which was wrapped in Parafilm and incubated at 30 °C with shaking at 150 rpm. Bacterial growth was determined at t = 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, and 20 h by measuring the OD600 using a BioTek Synergy HT plate reader. Each well condition was prepared in duplicate and at least three independent replicates were conducted on different days and using two different DP stock solutions. The resulting mean OD600 values are reported and the error bars represent the standard deviation.
:
100 into 5 mL of fresh LB medium containing DP (200 μM) and incubated at 37 °C with shaking at 150 rpm until OD600 reached 0.6. The cultures were subsequently diluted to an OD600 value of 0.001 using 50% MHB medium (11.5 g L−1) with or without DP (200 μM). A 90 μL aliquot of the diluted culture was combined with a 10 μL aliquot of a 10× solution of Amp/Amx or (Glc)Ent–Amp/Amx 5–10 in a 96-well plate, which was wrapped in Parafilm and incubated at 30 °C with shaking at 150 rpm for 19 h. Bacterial growth was determined by measuring the OD600 using a BioTek Synergy HT plate reader. Each well condition was prepared in duplicate and at least three independent replicates were conducted on different days and using different synthetic batches of each conjugate. The resulting mean OD600 values are reported and the error bars represent the standard deviation.
For L. rhamnosus GG ATCC 53103, the bacterial culture was grown in MRS medium overnight. The resulting culture was diluted 1
:
50 into 5 mL of fresh MRS medium containing DP (200 μM) and incubated at 37 °C with shaking at 150 rpm until OD600 reached 1.0. The culture was subsequently diluted to an OD600 value of 0.004 in 1
:
1 MRS/MHB medium with or without DP (200 μM). The antibacterial activity assays were performed as described above for E. coli.
:
100 into 5 mL of fresh LB medium with 200 μM DP and incubated at 37 °C with shaking at 150 rpm until OD600 reached ≈0.3. The culture was centrifuged (3000 rpm × 10 min, rt) and the resulting pellet was resuspended in 50% MHB and centrifuged (3000 rpm × 10 min, rt). The resulting pellet was resuspended in 50% MHB with or without DP (200 μM) and the OD600 was adjusted to 0.3. A 90 μL aliquot of the resulting culture was combined with a 10 μL aliquot of a 10× solution of Amp/Amx or (Glc)Ent–Amp/Amx 5–10 in a 96-well plate, which was wrapped in Parafilm and incubated at 37 °C with shaking at 150 rpm. The OD600 values were recorded at t = 0, 1, 2, and 3 h. In a parallel experiment, a 10 μL aliquot of the culture was taken at t = 0, 1, 2, and 3 h and serially diluted by using sterile phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and plated on LB agar to obtain colony forming units (CFU mL−1). Each well condition was repeated at least three times independently on different days. The resulting mean OD600 or CFU mL−1 is reported and the error bars are the standard deviation.
:
100 into 5 mL of fresh LB medium containing 200 μM DP, but no antibiotics, and incubated at 37 °C with shaking at 150 rpm until OD600 reached 0.6. The cultures were diluted to an OD600 value of 0.001 in 50% MHB separately or in a 1
:
1 mixture (106 CFU mL−1 for each strain), with or without 200 μM DP. No antibiotic marker was included in these cultures. Aliquots of these cultures were serially diluted by using sterile PBS and plated on LB agar plates with or without corresponding antibiotic to confirm the CFU of the starter cultures. A 90 μL aliquot of each culture was combined with a 10 μL aliquot of a 1 μM solution of Amp/Amx or (Glc)Ent–Amp/Amx 5–10 in a 96-well plate. The plate was then wrapped in Parafilm and incubated at 30 °C with shaking at 150 rpm for 19 h. Bacterial growth was evaluated by measuring OD600 as well as counting colonies formed on LB agar with or without kanamycin/chloramphenicol after serial dilution with sterile PBS. Each well condition was repeated at least three times independently on different days. The resulting mean OD600 and CFU mL−1 values are reported and the error bars are the standard deviation.
:
100 (E. coli) or 1
:
50 (L. rhamnosus GG) into 5 mL of fresh LB or MRS medium with 200 μM DP and incubated at 37 °C with shaking at 150 rpm until OD600 reached 0.6 (E. coli) or 1.0 (L. rhamnosus GG). The cultures were diluted to an OD600 value of 0.001 (E. coli) or 0.004 (L. rhamnosus GG) in 1
:
1 MRS/MHB containing 200 μM DP separately or in a 1
:
1 mixture (106 CFU mL−1 for each strain). Aliquots of these cultures were serially diluted by using sterile PBS and plated on LB and MRS agar plates to confirm the CFU of the starter culture. A 90 μL aliquot of each culture was combined with a 10 μL aliquot of a 10 μM solution of Amp/Amx or (Glc)Ent–Amp/Amx 5–10 in a 96-well plate, which was wrapped in Parafilm and incubated at 30 °C with shaking at 150 rpm for 19 h. Bacterial growth was assayed by both measuring OD600 and counting colonies formed on LB and MRS agar plates after serial dilution with sterile PBS. Each well condition was repeated at least three times independently on different days. The resulting mean OD600 and CFU mL−1 values are reported and the error bars are the standard deviation. Comment: E. coli CFT073 forms colonies more quickly than L. rhamnosus GG on LB agar plates, whereas L. rhamnosus GG colonies appear more quickly than those of E. coli CFT073 on MRS agar plates, and these behaviours allow for each strain to be monitored independently over a 24 h period.
The assays were also performed by co-culturing E. coli CFT073 or UTI89 with S. aureus ATCC 25923 or A. baumannii ATCC 17961. A 5 mL culture of each individual bacterial strain was grown for 16–18 h in LB. The overnight culture was diluted 1
:
100 into 5 mL of fresh LB with 200 μM DP and incubated at 37 °C with shaking at 150 rpm until OD600 reached 0.6. The cultures were diluted to an OD600 value of 0.001 in 50% MHB containing 200 μM DP separately or in a 1
:
1 mixture (106 CFU mL−1 for each strain). A 90 μL aliquot of each culture was combined with a 10 μL aliquot of a 10 μM solution of Amp/Amx or (Glc)Ent–Amp/Amx 5–10 in a 96-well plate, which was wrapped in Parafilm and incubated at 30 °C with shaking at 150 rpm for 19 h. Bacterial growth was assayed by both measuring OD600 and counting colonies formed on HardyCHROM UTI plates after serial dilution with sterile PBS. Plating E. coli strains on these plates results in pink colonies, whereas S. aureus and A. baumannii provide white colonies. Each well condition was repeated at least three times independently on different days. The resulting mean OD600 and CFU mL−1 values are reported and the error bars are the standard deviation.
:
100 into 5 mL of fresh modified M9 minimal medium and incubated at 37 °C with shaking at 150 rpm until OD600 reached 0.6. The OD600 of the culture was adjusted to 0.001, and the culture was further diluted 1
:
100 with the M9 medium in two steps (1
:
10 × 1
:
10). The corresponding CFU was determined to be ≈104 CFU mL−1 by plating on LB agar plates. Lipocalin 2 (Lcn2, R&D Systems) was diluted into PBS, pH 7.4 to a concentration of 20 μM and frozen at −20 °C until use. Bovine serum albumin (BSA, Sigma-Aldrich) was prepared in PBS, pH 7.4 to achieve a concentration of 20 μM. A 90 μL aliquot of the diluted culture was combined with a 5 μL aliquot of a 20× solution of (Glc)Ent–Amp/Amx 5–10 and a 5 μL aliquot of Lcn2 or BSA in a 96-well plate, which was wrapped in Parafilm and incubated at 37 °C with shaking at 150 rpm for 24 h. Bacterial growth was determined by OD600. Each well condition was repeated at least three times independently on different days. The resulting mean OD600 is reported and the error bars are the standard deviation.
:
1 DMEM/F12 medium with 10% fetal bovine serum, and 1% penicillin and streptomycin (v/v, ATCC). The cells were grown to approximately 95% confluency and treated with 3 mL of trypsin-EDTA (Corning). A 12 mL portion of fresh medium was added to the detached cells, and the T84 cell suspension was centrifuged (600 rpm × 5 min, 37 °C). The supernatant was discarded and the cell pellet was resuspended in 6 mL of the fresh culture medium. The concentration of cells was quantified by using a manual hemocytometer (VWR International) and adjusted to 1 × 105 cells per mL. A 90 μL aliquot of T84 cells were then added to 96-well plates and incubated at 37 °C and 5% CO2 for 24 h. Stock solutions (10×) of Amp/Amx or (Glc)Ent–Amp/Amx 5–10 were prepared in sterile-filtered 10% DMSO/H2O and 10 μL of each solution was added to the appropriate well. The plate was incubated at 37 °C and 5% CO2 for another 24 h. 3-[4,5-Dimethylthiazol-2-yl]-2,5 diphenyl tetrazolium bromide (MTT, Alfa Aesar) was dissolved in sterile PBS and the concentration was adjusted to 5 mg mL−1. The resulting yellow solution was filtered through a 0.2 μm filter and a 20 μL aliquot of the resulting MTT solution was added to each well. The plate was incubated at 37 °C and 5% CO2 for 4 h and the supernatant was removed from each well. DMSO (100 μL) was added to each well and the absorbance at 550 nm was recorded by using a plate reader. Blank readings were recorded on wells that contained only the medium. The assay was repeated in triplicate on different days, and the mean and standard deviation are reported.
Footnote |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Tables of bacterial strains employed in this study, iron content of the antimicrobial activity medium, characterization of GlcEnt–Amp/Amx 7–10, GlcEnt-PEG3-N312–13, and BLAST search for iroN sequence. Figures of HPLC traces of MceC- and IroB-catalyzed glucosylation of Ent-PEG3-N311, optical absorption spectra of GlcEnt–Amp/Amx 7–10, additional antimicrobial activity assays, time-kill kinetics, competition assays for FepA and IroN recognition, mixed-species antimicrobial activity assays, Lcn2 effect on antibacterial activity of GlcEnt–Amp/Amx 7–10, and cytotoxicity assays against T84 cells. See DOI: 10.1039/c5sc00962f |
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