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Insights into the Antibacterial Mechanism of Action of Chelating Agents by Selective Deprivation of Iron, Manganese, and Zinc

Bacterial growth and proliferation can be restricted by limiting the availability of metal ions in their environment. Humans sequester iron, manganese, and zinc to help prevent infection by pathogens, a system termed nutritional immunity. Commercially used chelants have high binding affinities with...

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Autores principales: Paterson, Joy R., Beecroft, Marikka S., Mulla, Raminder S., Osman, Deenah, Reeder, Nancy L., Caserta, Justin A., Young, Tessa R., Pettigrew, Charles A., Davies, Gareth E., Williams, J. A. Gareth, Sharples, Gary J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8788741/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34788072
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.01641-21
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author Paterson, Joy R.
Beecroft, Marikka S.
Mulla, Raminder S.
Osman, Deenah
Reeder, Nancy L.
Caserta, Justin A.
Young, Tessa R.
Pettigrew, Charles A.
Davies, Gareth E.
Williams, J. A. Gareth
Sharples, Gary J.
author_facet Paterson, Joy R.
Beecroft, Marikka S.
Mulla, Raminder S.
Osman, Deenah
Reeder, Nancy L.
Caserta, Justin A.
Young, Tessa R.
Pettigrew, Charles A.
Davies, Gareth E.
Williams, J. A. Gareth
Sharples, Gary J.
author_sort Paterson, Joy R.
collection PubMed
description Bacterial growth and proliferation can be restricted by limiting the availability of metal ions in their environment. Humans sequester iron, manganese, and zinc to help prevent infection by pathogens, a system termed nutritional immunity. Commercially used chelants have high binding affinities with a variety of metal ions, which may lead to antibacterial properties that mimic these innate immune processes. However, the modes of action of many of these chelating agents in bacterial growth inhibition and their selectivity in metal deprivation in cellulo remain ill-defined. We address this shortcoming by examining the effect of 11 chelators on Escherichia coli growth and their impact on the cellular concentration of five metals. The following four distinct effects were uncovered: (i) no apparent alteration in metal composition, (ii) depletion of manganese alongside reductions in iron and zinc levels, (iii) reduced zinc levels with a modest reduction in manganese, and (iv) reduced iron levels coupled with elevated manganese. These effects do not correlate with the absolute known chelant metal ion affinities in solution; however, for at least five chelators for which key data are available, they can be explained by differences in the relative affinity of chelants for each metal ion. The results reveal significant insights into the mechanism of growth inhibition by chelants, highlighting their potential as antibacterials and as tools to probe how bacteria tolerate selective metal deprivation. IMPORTANCE Chelating agents are widely used in industry and consumer goods to control metal availability, with bacterial growth restriction as a secondary benefit for preservation. However, the antibacterial mechanism of action of chelants is largely unknown, particularly with respect to the impact on cellular metal concentrations. The work presented here uncovers distinct metal starvation effects imposed by different chelants on the model Gram-negative bacterium Escherichia coli. The chelators were studied both individually and in pairs, with the majority producing synergistic effects in combinations that maximize antibacterial hostility. The judicious selection of chelants based on contrasting cellular effects should enable reductions in the quantities of chelant required in numerous commercial products and presents opportunities to replace problematic chemistries with biodegradable alternatives.
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spelling pubmed-87887412022-02-09 Insights into the Antibacterial Mechanism of Action of Chelating Agents by Selective Deprivation of Iron, Manganese, and Zinc Paterson, Joy R. Beecroft, Marikka S. Mulla, Raminder S. Osman, Deenah Reeder, Nancy L. Caserta, Justin A. Young, Tessa R. Pettigrew, Charles A. Davies, Gareth E. Williams, J. A. Gareth Sharples, Gary J. Appl Environ Microbiol Genetics and Molecular Biology Bacterial growth and proliferation can be restricted by limiting the availability of metal ions in their environment. Humans sequester iron, manganese, and zinc to help prevent infection by pathogens, a system termed nutritional immunity. Commercially used chelants have high binding affinities with a variety of metal ions, which may lead to antibacterial properties that mimic these innate immune processes. However, the modes of action of many of these chelating agents in bacterial growth inhibition and their selectivity in metal deprivation in cellulo remain ill-defined. We address this shortcoming by examining the effect of 11 chelators on Escherichia coli growth and their impact on the cellular concentration of five metals. The following four distinct effects were uncovered: (i) no apparent alteration in metal composition, (ii) depletion of manganese alongside reductions in iron and zinc levels, (iii) reduced zinc levels with a modest reduction in manganese, and (iv) reduced iron levels coupled with elevated manganese. These effects do not correlate with the absolute known chelant metal ion affinities in solution; however, for at least five chelators for which key data are available, they can be explained by differences in the relative affinity of chelants for each metal ion. The results reveal significant insights into the mechanism of growth inhibition by chelants, highlighting their potential as antibacterials and as tools to probe how bacteria tolerate selective metal deprivation. IMPORTANCE Chelating agents are widely used in industry and consumer goods to control metal availability, with bacterial growth restriction as a secondary benefit for preservation. However, the antibacterial mechanism of action of chelants is largely unknown, particularly with respect to the impact on cellular metal concentrations. The work presented here uncovers distinct metal starvation effects imposed by different chelants on the model Gram-negative bacterium Escherichia coli. The chelators were studied both individually and in pairs, with the majority producing synergistic effects in combinations that maximize antibacterial hostility. The judicious selection of chelants based on contrasting cellular effects should enable reductions in the quantities of chelant required in numerous commercial products and presents opportunities to replace problematic chemistries with biodegradable alternatives. American Society for Microbiology 2022-01-25 /pmc/articles/PMC8788741/ /pubmed/34788072 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.01641-21 Text en Copyright © 2022 Paterson et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Genetics and Molecular Biology
Paterson, Joy R.
Beecroft, Marikka S.
Mulla, Raminder S.
Osman, Deenah
Reeder, Nancy L.
Caserta, Justin A.
Young, Tessa R.
Pettigrew, Charles A.
Davies, Gareth E.
Williams, J. A. Gareth
Sharples, Gary J.
Insights into the Antibacterial Mechanism of Action of Chelating Agents by Selective Deprivation of Iron, Manganese, and Zinc
title Insights into the Antibacterial Mechanism of Action of Chelating Agents by Selective Deprivation of Iron, Manganese, and Zinc
title_full Insights into the Antibacterial Mechanism of Action of Chelating Agents by Selective Deprivation of Iron, Manganese, and Zinc
title_fullStr Insights into the Antibacterial Mechanism of Action of Chelating Agents by Selective Deprivation of Iron, Manganese, and Zinc
title_full_unstemmed Insights into the Antibacterial Mechanism of Action of Chelating Agents by Selective Deprivation of Iron, Manganese, and Zinc
title_short Insights into the Antibacterial Mechanism of Action of Chelating Agents by Selective Deprivation of Iron, Manganese, and Zinc
title_sort insights into the antibacterial mechanism of action of chelating agents by selective deprivation of iron, manganese, and zinc
topic Genetics and Molecular Biology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8788741/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34788072
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.01641-21
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