Design of small molecule inhibitors of type III secretion system ATPase EscN from enteropathogenic Escherichia coli.

  • Lukasz Bzdzion Department of Biotechnology, Wroclaw Research Centre EIT+ Ltd., Wrocław, Poland.;
  • Hanna Krezel Department of Biotechnology, Wroclaw Research Centre EIT+ Ltd., Wrocław, Poland.;
  • Karol Wrzeszcz Department of Biotechnology, Wroclaw Research Centre EIT+ Ltd., Wrocław, Poland.;
  • Irmina Grzegorek Department of Biotechnology, Wroclaw Research Centre EIT+ Ltd., Wrocław, Poland.;
  • Katarzyna Nowinska Department of Biotechnology, Wroclaw Research Centre EIT+ Ltd., Wrocław, Poland.;
  • Grzegorz Chodaczek Department of Biotechnology, Wroclaw Research Centre EIT+ Ltd., Wrocław, Poland.;
  • Wieslaw Swietnicki Department of Biotechnology, Wroclaw Research Centre EIT+ Ltd., Wrocław, Poland.; Institute of Immunology and Experimental Therapy of the Polish Academy of Sciences, Wrocław, Poland.;

Abstract

Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) is a human pathogen using type III secretion system for delivery of proteins directly into the human host. The system contains a single ATPase, EscN, which is essential for uncoupling of proteins from their complexes with chaperones before the delivery. The structure of EscN ATPase (PDB code: 2obm) was used to screen computationally for small molecule inhibitors blocking its active site. Two lead candidates were examined but only one, Compound 54, was selected for further optimization. After extended QSAR optimization, two derivatives were found to be competitive inhibitors of EscN capable of blocking ATPase activity with a Ki below 50 µM. One candidate, WEN05-03, with a Ki=16±2 µM, was also minimally toxic to mammalian cells as determined by other assays. In the cell infection model of HeLa cells with EPEC, Compound WEN05-03 completely blocked actin cluster formation at 100 µM concentration, when analyzed by confocal microscopy. The second best inhibitor of EscN ATPase activity was WEN04-34 with a Ki=46±2 µM. However, the compound was highly toxic to the BALB/3T3 cell line. In summary, the work identifies a compound blocking bacterial ATPase in its active site without causing cellular toxicity to the host cells. It is the first report showing feasibility of using bacterial virulence system ATPase as a target for safe, non-toxic compounds and offering a proof-of-concept for non-antibiotic alternatives.
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