| Literature DB >> 35983964 |
Xin Su1, Hangqian Yu2, Xingye Wang1, Chi Zhang1, Heming Wang3, Xiangri Kong1,4, Yishen Qu5, Yanhe Luan4, Ying Meng1, Jiyu Guan6, Guangqi Song3, Li Wang1, Wu Song1, Yicheng Zhao1,7.
Abstract
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) has been developing rapidly in recent years. It poses a severe peril to global health care, and the new strategies to against the MRSA is urgently needed. Sortase A (SrtA) regulates the anchoring of many surface proteins. Compounds repress Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) cysteine transpeptidase SrtA are considered adequate potent virulence inhibitors. Then, we describe the identification of an effective SrtA inhibitor, cyanidin chloride, a bioflavonoid compound isolated from various plants. It has a reversible inhibitory effect on SrtA activity at an IC50 of 21.91 μg/mL. As a SrtA inhibitor, cyanidin chloride antagonizes SrtA-related virulence phenotypes due to its breadth and specificity, including fibrinogen adhesion, A549 cell invasion, biofilm formation, and surface protein (SpA) anchoring. Subsequently, molecular docking and fluorescence quenching revealed that SrtA and cyanidin chloride had robust mutual affinity. Further mechanistic studies revealed that Arg-197, Gly-167, and Sep-116 were the key-binding sites mediating the interaction between SrtA and cyanidin chloride. Notably, a significant therapeutic effect of cyanidin chloride in vivo was also observed on the mouse pneumonia model induced by MRSA. In conclusion, our study indicates that cyanidin chloride potentially represents a new candidate SrtA inhibitor for S. aureus and potentially be developed as a new antivirulence agent.Entities:
Keywords: Sortase A; anti-Virulence; cyanidin chloride; methicillin-resistantstaphylococcus aureus; pneumonia
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35983964 PMCID: PMC9397467 DOI: 10.1080/21505594.2022.2112831
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virulence ISSN: 2150-5594 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1.Cyanidin chloride reversibly inhibited S. aureus SrtA activity. (a) SrtA inhibitors were screened from natural compounds based on FRET upon substrate cleavage, and cyanidin chloride was identified as an SrtA inhibitor. (b) Inhibitory effects of cyanidin chloride on the activity of S. aureus USA300 SrtA in vitro. (c) Cyanidin chloride could reversibly inhibit SrtA activity. (d) S. aureus USA300 growth curve with or without cyanidin chloride (64 μg/mL) and ΔsrtA group. (e) the percent cell viability of HepG2 cells measured by CCK8 assay after 24 h incubating with various concentrations of cyanidin chloride. (f) the LDH released from HepG2 cells treated with or without cyanidin chloride. * indicates P < 0.05, **indicates P < 0.01, and *** indicates P < 0.001 compared to the control group.
Figure 2.The influence of cyanidin chloride on SrtA-related phenotypes of S. aureus. (a) Effect of cyanidin chloride on the adhesion of S. aureus USA300 to fibrinogen. (b) the effect of cyanidin chloride on internalization of S. aureus into A549 cells. (c) Antagonistic effects of cyanidin chloride on S. aureus USA300 biofilm formation. (d) Flow cytometry analysis of S. aureus surface protein (SpA) stained with FITC-labeled rabbit IgG. (e) the transcript levels of spa in the presence of various concentrations of cyanidin chloride were determined by RT-qPCR. * indicates P < 0.05, **indicates P < 0.01, and *** indicates P < 0.001 compared to the untreated group.
Figure 3.The expression of SrtA in the presence of cyanidin chloride and between cyanidin chloride and StrA by fluorescence quenching assay. (a) Expression of SrtA in the S. aureus USA300 with different concentrations of cyanidin chloride by western blotting. (b) Binding affinity between cyanidin chloride and SrtA. The K of cyanidin chloride and SrtA was calculated by plotting the Stern-Volmer SrtA quenching. (c) Molecular docking illustrated that the binding mode of cyanidin chloride in SrtA binding pocket. (d). WT-SrtA and SrtA mutants (S116A-SrtA, G167A-SrtA, R197A-SrtA) were incubated with 64 μg/mL cyanidin chloride, and the transepiptase activity of the recombinant SrtA was determined by FRET. *** P < 0.001 were calculated using one-way ANOVA.
Figure 4.Cyanidin chloride alleviated the infection of the S. aureus-induced pneumonia in mice. (a) Effect of cyanidin chloride on survival of mice (n=10) with S. aureus USA300 pneumonia was recorded in 12 h intervals for 4 days. The statistical significance was determined with the log-rank test (*** P < 0.001). (b) the bacterial load of the S. aureus USA300 in the mice lung treated with or without cyanidin chloride. The limit of lung bacterial load detection was 1×103. the statistical significance was determined with the Mann–Whitney test (***P < 0.001). (c) H&E staining and histopathology analysis of the mice lung tissues with or without treatment of cyanidin chloride (80 mg/kg).