posted on 2015-07-29, 00:00authored byTimo Koopmans, Thomas
M. Wood, Peter ’t Hart, Laurens H. J. Kleijn, Antoni P. A. Hendrickx, Rob J. L. Willems, Eefjan Breukink, Nathaniel I. Martin
The lipid II-binding N-terminus of
nisin, comprising the so-called
A/B ring system, was synthetically modified to provide antibacterially
active and proteolytically stable derivatives. A variety of lipids
were coupled to the C-terminus of the nisin A/B ring system to generate
semisynthetic constructs that display potent inhibition of bacterial
growth, with activities approaching that of nisin itself. Most notable
was the activity observed against clinically relevant bacterial strains
including MRSA and VRE. Experiments with membrane models indicate
that these constructs operate via a lipid II-mediated mode of action
without causing pore formation. A lipid II-dependent mechanism of
action is further supported by antagonization assays wherein the addition
of lipid II was found to effectively block the antibacterial activity
of the nisin-derived lipopeptides.