| Literature DB >> 18215770 |
Franca Castiglione1, Ameriga Lazzarini, Lucia Carrano, Emiliana Corti, Ismaela Ciciliato, Luciano Gastaldo, Paolo Candiani, Daniele Losi, Flavia Marinelli, Enrico Selva, Francesco Parenti.
Abstract
Antibiotics blocking bacterial cell wall assembly (beta-lactams and glycopeptides) are facing a challenge from the progressive spread of resistant pathogens. Lantibiotics are promising candidates to alleviate this problem. Microbisporicin, the most potent antibacterial among known comparable lantibiotics, was discovered during a screening applied to uncommon actinomycetes. It is produced by Microbispora sp. as two similarly active and structurally related polypeptides (A1, 2246-Da and A2, 2230-Da) of 24 amino acids linked by 5 intramolecular thioether bridges. Microbisporicin contains two posttranslational modifications that have never been reported previously in lantibiotics: 5-chloro-trypthopan and mono- (in A2) or bis-hydroxylated (in A1) proline. Consistent with screening criteria, microbisporicin selectively blocks peptidoglycan biosynthesis, causing cytoplasmic UDP-linked precursor accumulation. Considering its spectrum of activity and its efficacy in vivo, microbisporicin represents a promising antibiotic to treat emerging infections.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18215770 DOI: 10.1016/j.chembiol.2007.11.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Biol ISSN: 1074-5521