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Identification of Novel Inhibitors of Escherichia coli DNA Ligase (LigA)
- Source :
- Molecules, Vol 26, Iss 2508, p 2508 (2021), Molecules, Volume 26, Issue 9, Alomari, A M A M, Gowland, R M N, Southwood, C, Barrow, J, Bentley, Z, Calvin-Nelson, J, Kaminski, A, LeFevre, M, Callaghan, A, Vincent, H & Gowers, D 2021, ' Identification of novel inhibitors of Escherichia coli DNA ligase ', Molecules, vol. 26, no. 9, 2508 . https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules26092508
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- MDPI AG, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Present in all organisms, DNA ligases catalyse the formation of a phosphodiester bond between a 3′ hydroxyl and a 5′ phosphate, a reaction that is essential for maintaining genome integrity during replication and repair. Eubacterial DNA ligases use NAD+ as a cofactor and possess low sequence and structural homology relative to eukaryotic DNA ligases which use ATP as a cofactor. These key differences enable specific targeting of bacterial DNA ligases as an antibacterial strategy. In this study, four small molecule accessible sites within functionally important regions of Escherichia coli ligase (EC-LigA) were identified using in silico methods. Molecular docking was then used to screen for small molecules predicted to bind to these sites. Eight candidate inhibitors were then screened for inhibitory activity in an in vitro ligase assay. Five of these (geneticin, chlorhexidine, glutathione (reduced), imidazolidinyl urea and 2-(aminomethyl)imidazole) showed dose-dependent inhibition of EC-LigA with half maximal inhibitory concentrations (IC50) in the micromolar to millimolar range (11–2600 µM). Two (geneticin and chlorhexidine) were predicted to bind to a region of EC-LigA that has not been directly investigated previously, raising the possibility that there may be amino acids within this region that are important for EC-LigA activity or that the function of essential residues proximal to this region are impacted by inhibitor interactions with this region. We anticipate that the identified small molecule binding sites and inhibitors could be pursued as part of an antibacterial strategy targeting bacterial DNA ligases.
- Subjects :
- In silico
NAD+-dependent
Pharmaceutical Science
Organic chemistry
Eukaryotic DNA replication
DNA Ligases
medicine.disease_cause
Analytical Chemistry
chemical inhibitors
BB/J016179/1
03 medical and health sciences
QD241-441
Drug Discovery
medicine
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
Escherichia coli
030304 developmental biology
chemistry.chemical_classification
0303 health sciences
DNA ligase
030306 microbiology
Chemistry
RCUK
molecular docking
antibacterial target
Small molecule
Biochemistry
Chemistry (miscellaneous)
BBSRC
Phosphodiester bond
Molecular Medicine
Small molecule binding
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 14203049
- Volume :
- 26
- Issue :
- 2508
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Molecules
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....19dd46d2582be84ea5443f61d0846749