| Literature DB >> 35473561 |
Yufang Zhang1,2,3, Yiying Zhang1,2, Chengchun Chen1,2, Hang Cheng1,2, Xiangbin Deng1,2, Duoyun Li1,2, Bing Bai1,2, Zhijian Yu1,2, Qiwen Deng4,5, Jie Guo6,7, Zewen Wen8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The increasing emergence of multidrug-resistant Gram-positive bacterial infections necessitates new antibacterial agents with novel mechanisms of action that can be used to treat these infections. Lomitapide has been approved by FDA for years in reducing levels of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) in cases of familial hypercholesterolemia, whereas the antibacterial effect of lomitapide remains elusive. In this study, the inhibitory activities of lomitapide against Gram-positive bacteria were the first time explored. Quantitative proteomics analysis was then applied to investigate the mechanisms of action of lomitapide.Entities:
Keywords: Biofilm formation; Lomitapide; Quantitative proteomics; S. aureus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35473561 PMCID: PMC9040290 DOI: 10.1186/s12866-022-02535-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 4.465
Fig. 1A flow chart diagram Showing the procedures of this study and the molecular structure of lomitapide. AST antimicrobial susceptibility testing
The MIC distribution of lomitapide against 49 clinical S. aureus strains
| No. of isolates tested | No. (%) of isolates | MIC50 (μM) | MIC90 (μM) | MIC Range | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LTP MIC = 12.5 μM | LTP MIC = 25 μM | (μM) | ||||
| MRSA | 33 | 6 (18.2%) | 27 (81.8%) | 25 | 25 | 12.5–25 |
| MSSA | 16 | 13 (81.3%) | 3 (18.7%) | 12.5 | 25 | 12.5–25 |
| Total | 49 | 19 (38.8%) | 30 (61.2%) | 25 | 25 | 12.5–25 |
LTP Lomitapide, MIC Minimum inhibitory concentration
Fig. 2The inhibitory effect of lomitapide against the S.aureus planktonic growth. The planktonic growth of four S. aureus strains were cultured separately and measured under various concentrations of Lomitapide, including 1 × MIC, 1/2 × MIC, 1/4 × MIC, 1/8 × MIC, in SA113 (A), CHS712 (B), HAMRSA21 (C) and YUSA139 (D). CHS712, YUSA139 and HAMRSA21 were MRSA clinical isolates. MIC for all strains in this experiment were showed with 25 μM. Data are presented as means ± SD
Fig. 3The anti-biofilm activity of lomitapide against S. aureus. A and B Four MRSA isolates (YUSA142, YUSA145, CHS350 and YUSA139), four MSSA isolates (YUSA80, SA113, YUSA21 and CHS101) were tested for the inhibitory effect of lomitapide on the biofilm formation under sub-inhibitory concentrations. C The anti-biofilm effect of lomitapide against 27 clinical MRSA isolates was assessed at 1/4 × MIC. The biofilm formation after 24 h incubation was measured by optic density (OD570) after dyeing with crystal violet. Data are presented as means ± SD. *: p < 0.05; **: p < 0.01
Fig. 4Differentially expressed proteins between the control groups and lomitapide-treated (at 1/2 × MIC) groups found by proteomics analysis. A Volcano map and total number of differentially expressed proteins, the horizontal axis represents the ratio of differentially expressed proteins in lomitapide treated group and untreated group of S. aureus, red shows an increase after treated and blue shows decrease. Vertical axis represents p-value between the two groups. B Gene Ontology analysis applied to differentially expressed proteins according to biological process. C KEGG analysis of the differentially expressed proteins using the DAVID database [22]
Fig. 5Protein − protein interaction network analysis for up-regulated proteins (A) and down-regulated proteins (B) after treated with 1/2 × MIC lomitapide base on STING database. Line thickness indicates the strength of data support. The disconnected nodes in the network are hidden
Fig. 6Growth curves of SE1457 and VraS/VraR deletion mutant (ΔvraSR) with lomitapide. The planktonic growth of S. epidermidis parent strain SE1457 and VraS/VraR deletion mutant (ΔvraSR) were monitored under various concentrations of lomitapide, including 6.25 μM, 12.5 μM, and 25 μM. Data are presented as means ± SD