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Research on the Impact and Mechanism for the Inhibition of Micrococcus Catalase Activity by Typical Tetracyclines

As potential inhibitors target to biological enzymes, antibiotics may have certain impacts on the biochemical treatment process. With micrococcus catalase (CAT) served as the target molecule, the impact and inhibition mechanism for typical tetracyclines (TCs) were evaluated. Toxicity experiments sho...

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Autores principales: Ren, Luyao, Wang, Qian, Du, Yonggang, Xu, Pengju, Zong, Wansong
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7603550/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33150175
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/5085369
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author Ren, Luyao
Wang, Qian
Du, Yonggang
Xu, Pengju
Zong, Wansong
author_facet Ren, Luyao
Wang, Qian
Du, Yonggang
Xu, Pengju
Zong, Wansong
author_sort Ren, Luyao
collection PubMed
description As potential inhibitors target to biological enzymes, antibiotics may have certain impacts on the biochemical treatment process. With micrococcus catalase (CAT) served as the target molecule, the impact and inhibition mechanism for typical tetracyclines (TCs) were evaluated. Toxicity experiments showed that TCs had significant inhibition on CAT in the sequence of tetracycline>chlortetracycline>oxytetracycline>doxycycline. To clarify the inhibition mechanism between TCs and CAT which was explored with the assistance of fluorescence spectroscopy and MOE molecule simulation. According to fluorescence analysis, TCs quenched the fluorescence signal of CAT by the mode of static quenching. Combined with toxicity data, it could be presumed that TCs combined with the catalytic active center and thus inhibited CAT. Above presumption was further verified by the molecular simulation data. When TCs combined with the catalytic center of CAT, the compounds have increased combination areas and prominent energy change (compared with the compounds formed by TCs and noncatalytic center recommend by MOE software). IBM SPSS statistics showed that TC toxicity positively correlated with the hydrogen bonds such as O(13)→Glu(252), O(1)←Arg(195), and O(6)→Asp(249), but negatively correlated with the hydrogen bonds such as O(10)→Pro(363), O(10)→Lys(455), and O(12) → Asn(127). TC toxicity also positively correlated with the ion bonds ofN(4)-Glu(252), but negatively correlated with the ion bonds of N(4)-Asp(379). Hydrogen bonds and ion bonds for above key sites were closely related to the inhibition effect of TCs on CAT.
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spelling pubmed-76035502020-11-03 Research on the Impact and Mechanism for the Inhibition of Micrococcus Catalase Activity by Typical Tetracyclines Ren, Luyao Wang, Qian Du, Yonggang Xu, Pengju Zong, Wansong Biomed Res Int Research Article As potential inhibitors target to biological enzymes, antibiotics may have certain impacts on the biochemical treatment process. With micrococcus catalase (CAT) served as the target molecule, the impact and inhibition mechanism for typical tetracyclines (TCs) were evaluated. Toxicity experiments showed that TCs had significant inhibition on CAT in the sequence of tetracycline>chlortetracycline>oxytetracycline>doxycycline. To clarify the inhibition mechanism between TCs and CAT which was explored with the assistance of fluorescence spectroscopy and MOE molecule simulation. According to fluorescence analysis, TCs quenched the fluorescence signal of CAT by the mode of static quenching. Combined with toxicity data, it could be presumed that TCs combined with the catalytic active center and thus inhibited CAT. Above presumption was further verified by the molecular simulation data. When TCs combined with the catalytic center of CAT, the compounds have increased combination areas and prominent energy change (compared with the compounds formed by TCs and noncatalytic center recommend by MOE software). IBM SPSS statistics showed that TC toxicity positively correlated with the hydrogen bonds such as O(13)→Glu(252), O(1)←Arg(195), and O(6)→Asp(249), but negatively correlated with the hydrogen bonds such as O(10)→Pro(363), O(10)→Lys(455), and O(12) → Asn(127). TC toxicity also positively correlated with the ion bonds ofN(4)-Glu(252), but negatively correlated with the ion bonds of N(4)-Asp(379). Hydrogen bonds and ion bonds for above key sites were closely related to the inhibition effect of TCs on CAT. Hindawi 2020-10-13 /pmc/articles/PMC7603550/ /pubmed/33150175 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/5085369 Text en Copyright © 2020 Luyao Ren et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ren, Luyao
Wang, Qian
Du, Yonggang
Xu, Pengju
Zong, Wansong
Research on the Impact and Mechanism for the Inhibition of Micrococcus Catalase Activity by Typical Tetracyclines
title Research on the Impact and Mechanism for the Inhibition of Micrococcus Catalase Activity by Typical Tetracyclines
title_full Research on the Impact and Mechanism for the Inhibition of Micrococcus Catalase Activity by Typical Tetracyclines
title_fullStr Research on the Impact and Mechanism for the Inhibition of Micrococcus Catalase Activity by Typical Tetracyclines
title_full_unstemmed Research on the Impact and Mechanism for the Inhibition of Micrococcus Catalase Activity by Typical Tetracyclines
title_short Research on the Impact and Mechanism for the Inhibition of Micrococcus Catalase Activity by Typical Tetracyclines
title_sort research on the impact and mechanism for the inhibition of micrococcus catalase activity by typical tetracyclines
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7603550/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33150175
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/5085369
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