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A Time‐Resolved FRET Assay Identifies a Small Molecule that Inhibits the Essential Bacterial Cell Wall Polymerase FtsW

Youngseon Park, Atsushi Taguchi, Vadim Baidin, Daniel Kahne, Suzanne Walker

2023Angewandte Chemie International Edition12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The peptidoglycan cell wall is essential for bacterial survival. To form the cell wall, peptidoglycan glycosyltransferases (PGTs) polymerize Lipid II to make glycan strands and then those strands are crosslinked by transpeptidases (TPs). Recently, the SEDS (for shape, elongation, division, and sporulation) proteins were identified as a new class of PGTs. The SEDS protein FtsW, which produces septal peptidoglycan during cell division, is an attractive target for novel antibiotics because it is essential in virtually all bacteria. Here, we developed a time-resolved Förster resonance energy transfer (TR-FRET) assay to monitor PGT activity and screened a Staphylococcus aureus lethal compound library for FtsW inhibitors. We identified a compound that inhibits S. aureus FtsW in vitro. Using a non-polymerizable Lipid II derivative, we showed that this compound competes with Lipid II for binding to FtsW. The assays described here will be useful for discovering and characterizing other PGT inhibitors.

Topics & Concepts

Lipid IIPeptidoglycanPenicillin binding proteinsBacterial cell structureFörster resonance energy transferBiochemistryGlycanGlycosyltransferaseCell wallChemistrySmall moleculeCell divisionBiologyEscherichia coliCell biologyBacteriaCellEnzymeGlycoproteinGeneFluorescenceGeneticsPhysicsQuantum mechanicsBacterial Genetics and BiotechnologyBacteriophages and microbial interactionsRNA and protein synthesis mechanisms