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Kinetic and Structural Requirements for Carbapenemase Activity in GES-Type β-Lactamases

[Image: see text] Carbapenems are the last resort antibiotics for treatment of life-threatening infections. The GES β-lactamases are important contributors to carbapenem resistance in clinical bacterial pathogens. A single amino acid difference at position 170 of the GES-1, GES-2, and GES-5 enzymes...

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Autores principales: Stewart, Nichole K., Smith, Clyde A., Frase, Hilary, Black, D. J., Vakulenko, Sergei B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2014
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4303295/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25485972
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi501052t
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author Stewart, Nichole K.
Smith, Clyde A.
Frase, Hilary
Black, D. J.
Vakulenko, Sergei B.
author_facet Stewart, Nichole K.
Smith, Clyde A.
Frase, Hilary
Black, D. J.
Vakulenko, Sergei B.
author_sort Stewart, Nichole K.
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Carbapenems are the last resort antibiotics for treatment of life-threatening infections. The GES β-lactamases are important contributors to carbapenem resistance in clinical bacterial pathogens. A single amino acid difference at position 170 of the GES-1, GES-2, and GES-5 enzymes is responsible for the expansion of their substrate profile to include carbapenem antibiotics. This highlights the increasing need to understand the mechanisms by which the GES β-lactamases function to aid in development of novel therapeutics. We demonstrate that the catalytic efficiency of the enzymes with carbapenems meropenem, ertapenem, and doripenem progressively increases (100-fold) from GES-1 to -5, mainly due to an increase in the rate of acylation. The data reveal that while acylation is rate limiting for GES-1 and GES-2 for all three carbapenems, acylation and deacylation are indistinguishable for GES-5. The ertapenem–GES-2 crystal structure shows that only the core structure of the antibiotic interacts with the active site of the GES-2 β-lactamase. The identical core structures of ertapenem, doripenem, and meropenem are likely responsible for the observed similarities in the kinetics with these carbapenems. The lack of a methyl group in the core structure of imipenem may provide a structural rationale for the increase in turnover of this carbapenem by the GES β-lactamases. Our data also show that in GES-2 an extensive hydrogen-bonding network between the acyl-enzyme complex and the active site water attenuates activation of this water molecule, which results in poor deacylation by this enzyme.
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spelling pubmed-43032952015-12-08 Kinetic and Structural Requirements for Carbapenemase Activity in GES-Type β-Lactamases Stewart, Nichole K. Smith, Clyde A. Frase, Hilary Black, D. J. Vakulenko, Sergei B. Biochemistry [Image: see text] Carbapenems are the last resort antibiotics for treatment of life-threatening infections. The GES β-lactamases are important contributors to carbapenem resistance in clinical bacterial pathogens. A single amino acid difference at position 170 of the GES-1, GES-2, and GES-5 enzymes is responsible for the expansion of their substrate profile to include carbapenem antibiotics. This highlights the increasing need to understand the mechanisms by which the GES β-lactamases function to aid in development of novel therapeutics. We demonstrate that the catalytic efficiency of the enzymes with carbapenems meropenem, ertapenem, and doripenem progressively increases (100-fold) from GES-1 to -5, mainly due to an increase in the rate of acylation. The data reveal that while acylation is rate limiting for GES-1 and GES-2 for all three carbapenems, acylation and deacylation are indistinguishable for GES-5. The ertapenem–GES-2 crystal structure shows that only the core structure of the antibiotic interacts with the active site of the GES-2 β-lactamase. The identical core structures of ertapenem, doripenem, and meropenem are likely responsible for the observed similarities in the kinetics with these carbapenems. The lack of a methyl group in the core structure of imipenem may provide a structural rationale for the increase in turnover of this carbapenem by the GES β-lactamases. Our data also show that in GES-2 an extensive hydrogen-bonding network between the acyl-enzyme complex and the active site water attenuates activation of this water molecule, which results in poor deacylation by this enzyme. American Chemical Society 2014-12-08 2015-01-20 /pmc/articles/PMC4303295/ /pubmed/25485972 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi501052t Text en Copyright © 2014 American Chemical Society This is an open access article published under an ACS AuthorChoice License (http://pubs.acs.org/page/policy/authorchoice_termsofuse.html) , which permits copying and redistribution of the article or any adaptations for non-commercial purposes.
spellingShingle Stewart, Nichole K.
Smith, Clyde A.
Frase, Hilary
Black, D. J.
Vakulenko, Sergei B.
Kinetic and Structural Requirements for Carbapenemase Activity in GES-Type β-Lactamases
title Kinetic and Structural Requirements for Carbapenemase Activity in GES-Type β-Lactamases
title_full Kinetic and Structural Requirements for Carbapenemase Activity in GES-Type β-Lactamases
title_fullStr Kinetic and Structural Requirements for Carbapenemase Activity in GES-Type β-Lactamases
title_full_unstemmed Kinetic and Structural Requirements for Carbapenemase Activity in GES-Type β-Lactamases
title_short Kinetic and Structural Requirements for Carbapenemase Activity in GES-Type β-Lactamases
title_sort kinetic and structural requirements for carbapenemase activity in ges-type β-lactamases
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4303295/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25485972
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi501052t
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