Membrane potential-dependent uptake of cationic oligoimidazolium mediates bacterial DNA damage and death

The treatment of bacterial infections is becoming increasingly challenging with the emergence of antimicrobial resistance. Thus, the development of antimicrobials with novel mechanisms of action is much needed. Previously, we designed several cationic main-chain imidazolium compounds and identified...

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Main Authors: Yong, Melvin, Kok, Zhi Y., Koh, Chong Hui, Zhong, Wenbin, Ng, Justin T. Y., Mu, Yuguang, Chan-Park, Mary B., Gan, Yunn-Hwen
Other Authors: School of Chemistry, Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/169440
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1694402023-07-21T15:31:47Z Membrane potential-dependent uptake of cationic oligoimidazolium mediates bacterial DNA damage and death Yong, Melvin Kok, Zhi Y. Koh, Chong Hui Zhong, Wenbin Ng, Justin T. Y. Mu, Yuguang Chan-Park, Mary B. Gan, Yunn-Hwen School of Chemistry, Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology School of Biological Sciences Centre for Antimicrobial Bioengineering Science::Biological sciences Engineering::Bioengineering DNA Damage Cationic The treatment of bacterial infections is becoming increasingly challenging with the emergence of antimicrobial resistance. Thus, the development of antimicrobials with novel mechanisms of action is much needed. Previously, we designed several cationic main-chain imidazolium compounds and identified the polyimidazolium PIM1 as a potent antibacterial against a wide panel of multidrug-resistant nosocomial pathogens, and it had relatively low toxicity against mammalian epithelial cells. However, little is known about the mechanism of action of PIM1. Using an oligomeric version of PIM1 with precisely six repeating units (OIM1-6) to control for consistency, we showed that OIM1-6 relies on an intact membrane potential for entry into the bacterial cytoplasm, as resistant mutants to OIM1-6 have mutations in their electron transport chains. These mutants demonstrate reduced uptake of the compound, which can be circumvented through the addition of a sub-MIC dose of colistin. Once taken up intracellularly, OIM1-6 exerts double-stranded DNA breaks. Its potency and ability to kill represents a promising class of drugs that can be combined with membrane-penetrating drugs to potentiate activity and hedge against the rise of resistant mutants. In summary, we discovered that cationic antimicrobial OIM1-6 exhibits an antimicrobial property that is dissimilar to the conventional cationic antimicrobial compounds. Its killing mechanism does not involve membrane disruption but instead depends on the membrane potential for uptake into bacterial cells so that it can exert its antibacterial effect intracellularly. Ministry of Education (MOE) Nanyang Technological University National Supercomputing Centre (NSCC) Singapore Published version This study was supported by the Ministry of Education, Singapore, under its MOE AcRF Tier 3 Award of MOE2018-T3-1-003. M.Y. acknowledges the support of the MOE Ph.D. scholarship under the MOE AcRF Tier 3 Award (MOE2018-T3-1-003). C.H.K. acknowledges the support of an NTU Ph.D. scholarship. Y.M. acknowledges the support of the Singapore MOE Tier 1 Grant RG27/21 and the Singapore National Supercomputing Center (NSCC). 2023-07-18T08:16:15Z 2023-07-18T08:16:15Z 2023 Journal Article Yong, M., Kok, Z. Y., Koh, C. H., Zhong, W., Ng, J. T. Y., Mu, Y., Chan-Park, M. B. & Gan, Y. (2023). Membrane potential-dependent uptake of cationic oligoimidazolium mediates bacterial DNA damage and death. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, 67(5), e0035523-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1128/aac.00355-23 0066-4804 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/169440 10.1128/aac.00355-23 37125913 2-s2.0-85159766919 5 67 e0035523 en MOE2018-T3-1-003 RG27/21 Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy © 2023 Yong et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Biological sciences
Engineering::Bioengineering
DNA Damage
Cationic
spellingShingle Science::Biological sciences
Engineering::Bioengineering
DNA Damage
Cationic
Yong, Melvin
Kok, Zhi Y.
Koh, Chong Hui
Zhong, Wenbin
Ng, Justin T. Y.
Mu, Yuguang
Chan-Park, Mary B.
Gan, Yunn-Hwen
Membrane potential-dependent uptake of cationic oligoimidazolium mediates bacterial DNA damage and death
description The treatment of bacterial infections is becoming increasingly challenging with the emergence of antimicrobial resistance. Thus, the development of antimicrobials with novel mechanisms of action is much needed. Previously, we designed several cationic main-chain imidazolium compounds and identified the polyimidazolium PIM1 as a potent antibacterial against a wide panel of multidrug-resistant nosocomial pathogens, and it had relatively low toxicity against mammalian epithelial cells. However, little is known about the mechanism of action of PIM1. Using an oligomeric version of PIM1 with precisely six repeating units (OIM1-6) to control for consistency, we showed that OIM1-6 relies on an intact membrane potential for entry into the bacterial cytoplasm, as resistant mutants to OIM1-6 have mutations in their electron transport chains. These mutants demonstrate reduced uptake of the compound, which can be circumvented through the addition of a sub-MIC dose of colistin. Once taken up intracellularly, OIM1-6 exerts double-stranded DNA breaks. Its potency and ability to kill represents a promising class of drugs that can be combined with membrane-penetrating drugs to potentiate activity and hedge against the rise of resistant mutants. In summary, we discovered that cationic antimicrobial OIM1-6 exhibits an antimicrobial property that is dissimilar to the conventional cationic antimicrobial compounds. Its killing mechanism does not involve membrane disruption but instead depends on the membrane potential for uptake into bacterial cells so that it can exert its antibacterial effect intracellularly.
author2 School of Chemistry, Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology
author_facet School of Chemistry, Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology
Yong, Melvin
Kok, Zhi Y.
Koh, Chong Hui
Zhong, Wenbin
Ng, Justin T. Y.
Mu, Yuguang
Chan-Park, Mary B.
Gan, Yunn-Hwen
format Article
author Yong, Melvin
Kok, Zhi Y.
Koh, Chong Hui
Zhong, Wenbin
Ng, Justin T. Y.
Mu, Yuguang
Chan-Park, Mary B.
Gan, Yunn-Hwen
author_sort Yong, Melvin
title Membrane potential-dependent uptake of cationic oligoimidazolium mediates bacterial DNA damage and death
title_short Membrane potential-dependent uptake of cationic oligoimidazolium mediates bacterial DNA damage and death
title_full Membrane potential-dependent uptake of cationic oligoimidazolium mediates bacterial DNA damage and death
title_fullStr Membrane potential-dependent uptake of cationic oligoimidazolium mediates bacterial DNA damage and death
title_full_unstemmed Membrane potential-dependent uptake of cationic oligoimidazolium mediates bacterial DNA damage and death
title_sort membrane potential-dependent uptake of cationic oligoimidazolium mediates bacterial dna damage and death
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/169440
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