Literature DB >> 3120788

Inhibition of polypeptide synthesis in cell-free systems by virginiamycin S and erythromycin. Evidence for a common mode of action of type B synergimycins and 14-membered macrolides.

G Chinali1, E Nyssen, M Di Giambattista, C Cocito.   

Abstract

Macrolides, lincosamides and type B synergimycins are powerful inhibitors of protein synthesis in vivo, but many of them were found to be inactive in vitro. In the present work, we confirm that virginiamycin S (a type B synergimycin) and erythromycin (a 14-membered macrolide) have no effect on poly(U)-directed poly(Phe) synthesis. However, the amino-acid polymerization reactions directed by poly(U,G), poly(U,C), poly(A,G) and poly(A,C) were increasingly inhibited (20-50%) by both antibiotics. The action of these inhibitors proved to be template-dependent and favored by the incorporation of proline and of basic amino acids into peptides. Under these conditions, virginiamycin S and erythromycin markedly stimulated a release of peptidyl-tRNA from the ribosomes. In the poly(A,C) model system, these antibiotics produced a 50% inhibition of amino-acid incorporation into total peptides, a 70% release of ribosome-bound peptidyl-tRNA, and a 95% repression of the synthesis of long peptide chains. The production of equivalent effects at saturating concentrations of these antibiotics in the four model systems examined is suggestive of a similarity in their mode of action. Our results indicate that 14-membered macrolides and type B synergimycins can act on ribosomes during the whole elongation process. The functional block produced by both antibiotics is usually reversible, but may result in a premature release of peptidyl-tRNA when the stability of ribosomal complexes is lowered by the incorporation of basic amino acids.

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Year:  1988        PMID: 3120788     DOI: 10.1016/0167-4781(88)90056-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta        ISSN: 0006-3002


  6 in total

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2.  Mechanism of action of streptogramins and macrolides.

Authors:  P Vannuffel; C Cocito
Journal:  Drugs       Date:  1996       Impact factor: 9.546

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Review 4.  Role of azithromycin in antiviral treatment: enhancement of interferon-dependent antiviral pathways and mitigation of inflammation may rely on inhibition of the MAPK cascade?

Authors:  Tapan Kumar Mohanta; Pietro Arina; Nanaocha Sharma; Paola Defilippi
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5.  Chemical probing of a virginiamycin M-promoted conformational change of the peptidyl-transferase domain.

Authors:  P Vannuffel; M Di Giambattista; C Cocito
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  1994-10-25       Impact factor: 16.971

6.  Direct inhibitory effect on viral entry of influenza A and SARS-CoV-2 viruses by azithromycin.

Authors:  Xiaohong Du; Xiangyang Zuo; Fang Meng; Chenfeng Han; Wei Ouyang; Yu Han; Yayun Gu; Xin Zhao; Feng Xu; Frank Xiaofeng Qin
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  6 in total

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