Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume 288, Issue 43, 25 October 2013, Pages 31115-31126
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Microbiology
Disarming Bacterial Virulence through Chemical Inhibition of the DNA Binding Domain of an AraC-like Transcriptional Activator Protein*

https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M113.503912Get rights and content
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The misuse of antibiotics during past decades has led to pervasive antibiotic resistance in bacteria. Hence, there is an urgent need for the development of new and alternative approaches to combat bacterial infections. In most bacterial pathogens the expression of virulence is tightly regulated at the transcriptional level. Therefore, targeting pathogens with drugs that interfere with virulence gene expression offers an effective alternative to conventional antimicrobial chemotherapy. Many Gram-negative intestinal pathogens produce AraC-like proteins that control the expression of genes required for infection. In this study we investigated the prototypical AraC-like virulence regulator, RegA, from the mouse attaching and effacing pathogen, Citrobacter rodentium, as a potential drug target. By screening a small molecule chemical library and chemical optimization, we identified two compounds that specifically inhibited the ability of RegA to activate its target promoters and thus reduced expression of a number of proteins required for virulence. Biophysical, biochemical, genetic, and computational analyses indicated that the more potent of these two compounds, which we named regacin, disrupts the DNA binding capacity of RegA by interacting with amino acid residues within a conserved region of the DNA binding domain. Oral administration of regacin to mice, commencing 15 min before or 12 h after oral inoculation with C. rodentium, caused highly significant attenuation of intestinal colonization by the mouse pathogen comparable to that of an isogenic regA-deletion mutant. These findings demonstrate that chemical inhibition of the DNA binding domains of transcriptional regulators is a viable strategy for the development of antimicrobial agents that target bacterial pathogens.

Background: New strategies are needed to combat antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

Results: This work identified a small molecule inhibitor, regacin, that specifically disrupts the action of a master virulence regulator from an intestinal pathogen.

Conclusion: Inhibition of virulence gene expression by small molecules is a valid therapeutic strategy.

Significance: Inhibitors of this kind can be developed into drugs to prevent or treat bacterial infections.

Antibiotics
Bacterial Pathogenesis
Gene Regulation
Infectious Diseases
Small Molecules
AraC-like Regulator
Bacterial Infection
Enteric Pathogen
Small Molecule Inhibitors
Virulence Gene Regulation

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*

This work was supported by grants from the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC), the NHMRC Independent Research Institutes Infrastructure Support Scheme, and the Victorian State Government Operational Infrastructure Support Program to St. Vincent's Institute and the Murdoch Childrens Research Institute.

1

Australian Research Council Future Fellows.

2

An Australian National Health and Medical Research Council Senior Principal Research Fellow.