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Download fileExploring the Role of Residue 228 in Substrate and Inhibitor Recognition by VIM Metallo-β-lactamases
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posted on 2015-05-26, 00:00 authored by Maria
F. Mojica, S. Graciela Mahler, Christopher
R. Bethel, Magdalena A. Taracila, Magda Kosmopoulou, Krisztina
M. Papp-Wallace, Leticia I. Llarrull, Brigid
M. Wilson, Steven H. Marshall, Christopher J. Wallace, Maria V. Villegas, Michael
E. Harris, Alejandro J. Vila, James Spencer, Robert A. Bonomoβ-Lactamase inhibitors (BLIs)
restore the efficacy of otherwise
obsolete β-lactams. However, commercially available BLIs are
not effective against metallo-β-lactamases (MBLs), which continue
to be disseminated globally. One group of the most clinically important
MBLs is the VIM family. The discovery of VIM-24, a natural variant
of VIM-2, possessing an R228L substitution and a novel phenotype,
compelled us to explore the role of this position and its effects
on substrate specificity. We employed mutagenesis, biochemical and
biophysical assays, and crystallography. VIM-24 (R228L) confers enhanced
resistance to cephems and increases the rate of turnover compared
to that of VIM-2 (kcat/KM increased by 6- and 10-fold for ceftazidime and cefepime,
respectively). Likely the R → L substitution relieves steric
clashes and accommodates the C3N-methyl pyrrolidine group of cephems.
Four novel bisthiazolidine (BTZ) inhibitors were next synthesized
and tested against these MBLs. These inhibitors inactivated VIM-2
and VIM-24 equally well (Ki* values of
40–640 nM) through a two-step process in which an initial enzyme
(E)–inhibitor (I) complex (EI) undergoes a conformational transition
to a more stable species, E*I. As both VIM-2 and VIM-24 were inhibited
in a similar manner, the crystal structure of a VIM-2–BTZ complex
was determined at 1.25 Å and revealed interactions of the inhibitor
thiol with the VIM Zn center. Most importantly, BTZs also restored
the activity of imipenem against Klebsiella pneumoniae and Pseudomonas aeruginosa in whole cell assays
producing VIM-24 and VIM-2, respectively. Our results suggest a role
for position 228 in defining the substrate specificity of VIM MBLs
and show that BTZ inhibitors are not affected by the R228L substitution.