Sandbox 126
From Proteopedia
(Difference between revisions)
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The bacterial cell wall is composed of sheets of peptidoglycan cross-linked together to form a highly polymeric "mesh" that helps maintain the structural strength of the cell (Figure 1). A peptidoglycan sheet consists of alternating residues of <font color='purple'> '''N-acetylmuramic acid (NAM)''' </font> and <font color='green'> '''N-acetylglucosamine (NAG)''' </font> linked together by β-(1,4)- glycosidic bonds. In ''Staphylococcus aureus'' (S. aureus), the NAM residues are coupled to a (D-Ala) residues. The sheets of peptidoglycan are cross-linked together with pentaglycine chains. The cross-linking of adjacent peptidoglycan sheets is catalyzed by transpeptidases (TP). Beta-Lactam antibiotics, such as penicillin and the anti-MRSA cephlosporins, ceftobiprole and ceftaroline, stop the production of the cell wall, and so kill bacteria, by irreversibly inhibiting TPs. Therefore, TPs are also called penicillin-binding proteins. | The bacterial cell wall is composed of sheets of peptidoglycan cross-linked together to form a highly polymeric "mesh" that helps maintain the structural strength of the cell (Figure 1). A peptidoglycan sheet consists of alternating residues of <font color='purple'> '''N-acetylmuramic acid (NAM)''' </font> and <font color='green'> '''N-acetylglucosamine (NAG)''' </font> linked together by β-(1,4)- glycosidic bonds. In ''Staphylococcus aureus'' (S. aureus), the NAM residues are coupled to a (D-Ala) residues. The sheets of peptidoglycan are cross-linked together with pentaglycine chains. The cross-linking of adjacent peptidoglycan sheets is catalyzed by transpeptidases (TP). Beta-Lactam antibiotics, such as penicillin and the anti-MRSA cephlosporins, ceftobiprole and ceftaroline, stop the production of the cell wall, and so kill bacteria, by irreversibly inhibiting TPs. Therefore, TPs are also called penicillin-binding proteins. | ||
- | PBP2a is composed of two domains: <font color='orange'> '''a non-penicillin binding <scene name='37/372726/Npb/ | + | PBP2a is composed of two domains: <font color='orange'> '''a non-penicillin binding <scene name='37/372726/Npb/4'>(NPB)</scene> domain'''</font> (residues 27-326) and a <font color='dodgerblue'> '''transpeptidase''' </font> <scene name='37/372726/Tp/4'>(TP)</scene> domain (residues 327-668). The NBP domain of PBP2a is anchored in the cell membrane, while the TP domain "sits" in the periplasm with its active site facing the inner surface of the cell wall. The active site contains a serine residue position 403 <scene name='37/372726/Ser403/2'>(Ser403)</scene> which catalyzes the cross-linking of the peptidoglycan rows with pentaglycine cross-links. |
==='''Mechanism of action of Beta-Lactam Antibiotics'''=== | ==='''Mechanism of action of Beta-Lactam Antibiotics'''=== | ||
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==='''PBP2a and Ceftobiprole'''=== | ==='''PBP2a and Ceftobiprole'''=== | ||
MRSA becomes resistant to β-lactams by acquiring an alternative PBP, PBP2a, that is neither bound nor inhibited by β-lactams. Ceftobiprole (PDB:<scene name='37/372726/4dki/1'>4DKI</scene>) is able to inhibit PBP2a because additional chemical groups at the <scene name='37/372726/Tyr446_and_met641/4'>R2</scene> position of the cephalosporin backbone are able to interact with additional amino acid residues in PBP2a; specifically | MRSA becomes resistant to β-lactams by acquiring an alternative PBP, PBP2a, that is neither bound nor inhibited by β-lactams. Ceftobiprole (PDB:<scene name='37/372726/4dki/1'>4DKI</scene>) is able to inhibit PBP2a because additional chemical groups at the <scene name='37/372726/Tyr446_and_met641/4'>R2</scene> position of the cephalosporin backbone are able to interact with additional amino acid residues in PBP2a; specifically | ||
- | <scene name='37/372726/Tyr446_and_met641/ | + | <scene name='37/372726/Tyr446_and_met641/5'>Tyr446 and Met641</scene>. As a result of tighter binding to PBP2a, ceftobiprole is able to more efficiently react with the serine active site residue and therefore inhibit the activity of PBP2a. |
Revision as of 17:53, 29 July 2014
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