Litcius/Paper detail

Gallic acid inhibits <i>Staphylococcus aureus</i> RecA protein functions: Role in countering antibiotic resistance in bacteria

Kajal Kiran, K. Neelakanteshwar Patil

2023Journal of Applied Microbiology11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

AIM: Recombinase RecA and its homologs play a key role in homologous recombination DNA repair and revive stalled replication fork DNA synthesis. RecA plays an essential role in the evolution of antibiotic-resistant strains via stress-induced DNA repair mechanisms during the SOS response. Accordingly, RecA has become an attractive target to slow down antibiotic resistance rates and prevent mutations in pathogenic bacterial species. METHODS AND RESULTS: We employed RecA conserved activities: DNA binding, displacement loop formation, strand exchange, ATP hydrolysis, and LexA cleavage, to elucidate the inhibitory role of gallic acid on Staphylococcus aureus RecA functions. Gallic acid inhibition of the SOS response by western blot analysis and its antibacterial activity were measured. The gallic acid inhibited all the canonical activities of S. aureus RecA protein. CONCLUSION: The natural phenolic compound gallic acid interferes with RecA protein DNA complex formation and inhibits activities such as displacementloop formation, strand exchange reaction, ATP hydrolysis, and coprotease activity of S. aureus. Additionally, gallic acid can obstruct ciprofloxacin-induced RecA expression and eventually confer the inhibitory role of gallic acid in the SOS survival mechanism in S. aureus.

Topics & Concepts

Gallic acidSOS responseRepressor lexADNABiologyMicrobiologyHomologous recombinationStaphylococcus aureusDNA damageDNA replicationBacteriaEscherichia coliBiochemistryChemistryMolecular biologyGeneGene expressionGeneticsRepressorAntioxidantDNA Repair MechanismsBacterial Genetics and BiotechnologyCell death mechanisms and regulation