| Literature DB >> 27391894 |
Marie Cellier1, Arthur L James2, Sylvain Orenga1, John D Perry3, Graeme Turnbull2, Stephen P Stanforth2.
Abstract
In clinical microbiology the speed with which pathogenic microorganisms may be detected has a direct impact on patient health. One important strategy used in the laboratory is the growth of cultures in the presence of an enzymatic substrate which, once transformed by the appropriate microbial enzyme, generates a detectable colour or fluorescence output. Such substrates have previously been prepared by our group and others and are available as commercial diagnostic kits, however they all suffer from some degree of diffusion when used in a solid growth medium. This diffusion complicates the detection and differentiation of species in polymicrobial cultures and so we sought to improve on our previous work. In this work we have prepared and evaluated a series of novel fluorogenic enzyme substrates based on N-substituted-2-aminoacridones. All of the prepared substrates were found to be suitable for the detection and differentiation of certain microorganisms, however those based on the 2-amino-10-benzylacridone core in particular showed no apparent diffusion when incorporated into solid growth media. On transformation these substrates generated brightly fluorescent colonies that are clearly contrasted with the background medium due to the difference in emission wavelength (λem 445-450 nm for the substrate, λem 550 nm for the product). Here we have shown that our L-alanyl aminopeptidase substrate, 2-(N-L-alanylamino)-10-benzylacridone, is particularly suited to the detection of Gram-negative bacteria, and our β-alanyl aminopeptidase substrate, 2-(N- β-alanylamino)-10-benzylacridone, to the detection of Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Serratia marcescens when grown on solid media incorporating these substrates. The resulting fluorophore shows no apparent diffusion from the colonies of interest, and the enhanced sensitivity offered by fluorescent emission may allow for the detection of these organisms as microcolonies using automated fluorescence microscopy.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27391894 PMCID: PMC4938530 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0158378
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Fluorescence generation from aminopeptidase activity (AA = amino acid).
Fig 2Fluorescent heterocyclic amines as core molecules for the preparation of fluorogenic aminopeptidase substrates.
Fig 3Synthesis of aminopeptidase substrates.
Reagents and conditions: (i) N-Boc-protected amino acid, N-methyl morpholine, isobutyl chloroformate, anhydrous THF, -12°C to RT overnight; (ii) TFA, RT, 2 h.
Excitation and emission wavelengths of amines 5a-c and substrates derived from these amines in ethanol solution (all 1 mg L-1).
| Amine | λex | λem | Substrate | λex | λem |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 434 | 546 | 418 | 453 | ||
| 435 | 545 | 401,418 | 445 | ||
| 429 | 550 | 415 | 445 | ||
| 414 | 450 | ||||
| 414 | 449 |
alit., 438 nm (EtOH).
Fig 4Solutions of amine 5c (left) and substrate 7c (right) in ethanol viewed under UV illumination at 365 nm (both at 10 μM).
Growth and fluorescence of Gram-negative microorganisms in the presence of substrates 7a-c.
| Substrate | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control | 7a | 7b | 7c | |||||
| Microorganism / Reference | Growth | Growth | Fluorescence | Growth | Fluorescence | Growth | Fluorescence | |
| 1 | ++ | - | - | - | - | ++ | ++ yellow | |
| 2 | ++ | - | - | - | - | ++ | - | |
| 3 | ++ | ++ | ++ yellow | ++ | + yellow | ++ | ++ yellow | |
| 4 | ++ | ++ | ++ yellow | ++ | + yellow | ++ | ++ yellow | |
| 5 | ++ | ++ | ++ yellow | ++ | ++ yellow | ++ | ++ yellow | |
| 6 | ++ | ++ | ++ yellow | ++ | + yellow | ++ | +/- yellow | |
| 7 | ++ | ++ | ++ yellow | ++ | + yellow | ++ | ++ yellow | |
| 8 | ++ | ++ | + yellow | ++ | + yellow | ++ | + yellow | |
| 9 | ++ | ++ | ++ yellow | ++ | + blue | ++ | ++ blue | |
| 10 | ++ | ++ | ++ yellow | - | - | + | + yellow | |
| Background | - | + blue | - | + blue | - | + blue | ||
a NCTC: National Collection of Type Cultures; ATCC: American Type Culture Collection; NCPF: National Collection of Pathogenic Fungi.
b ++ strong growth, + moderate growth,—no growth.
c ++ strong fluorescence, + moderate fluorescence, +/- weak fluorescence,—no fluorescence.
Fig 5Colonies of S. aureus (left) and E. coli (right) after incubation in the presence of substrate 7c.