Blocking Cationic Antimicrobial Peptide-Resistance in Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Project Number5SC3GM118199-08
Former Number5SC3GM118199-04
Contact PI/Project LeaderMILLER CONRAD, LAURA C.
Awardee OrganizationSAN JOSE STATE UNIVERSITY
Description
Abstract Text
Project Summary/Abstract
Infections with antibiotic-resistant strains of bacteria are a looming public health threat to the nation. The
problem is especially pressing in the era of COVID-19, where secondary infections were identified in half of
hospitalized patients who did not survive. More research on the identity of the secondary infections in the
current outbreak still needs to be conducted, but in the SARS coronavirus outbreak, gram-negative bacteria
were the most common source of the hospital-acquired infections. Gram-negative bacteria like Pseudomonas
aeruginosa have few effective treatments, making any resistant strains particularly difficult to treat. Cationic
antimicrobial peptides (CAPs) like colistin are currently used as last line therapies to treat infections with
multidrug-resistant strains, however, colistin-resistant strains are increasingly encountered. P. aeruginosa
becomes resistant to CAPs by modifying the lipids of its outer membrane to reduce the net negative charge.
Without the favorable electrostatic interaction between the positively-charged CAP and the negatively-
charged bacterial outer membrane, the antibiotic cannot enter and kill the bacterium. Our goal is to develop
and characterize inhibitors of the CAP-resistance pathway in the bacterium. If the outer membrane remains
negatively charged, the CAP should continue to work. The inhibitors could be used as an adjuvant in a
combination therapy along with a CAP to treat resistant infections.
In the first funding period, we identified a suite of compounds that act as antibiotic adjuvants, potentiating
susceptibility to colistin. In the current work, we propose to characterize the efficacy of the combination
treatment (Aim 1). We will investigate activity toward biofilms, resistant strains, and under resistance-
inducing conditions. The kinetics of killing and the development of resistance will also be studied. Our current
hypothesis is that the antibiotic adjuvant acts by inhibition of ArnA, a key bifunctional biosynthetic enzyme of
the lipid modification pathway. We will study the adjuvant’s effects on the ArnA-mediated resistance
pathway through analysis of the lipids by mass spectrometry and direct interactions with ArnA in kinetics and
binding experiments (Aim 2). The proposed work will validate the further development of the combination
therapy towards use in the clinic. Confirmation of the molecular target will also guide the optimization of even
more potent inhibitors in future work. Deciphering the molecular target could also allow us to extend the
therapy to other gram-negative bacteria like carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae and drug-resistant
Salmonella as a long-term goal. The first-in-class inhibitor has the potential to widen the therapeutic index of
colistin, minimizing the drug’s serious side effects, as well as to enable the treatment of colistin-resistant
strains, ensuring the continued efficacy of the life-saving drug.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Project Narrative
Antibacterial resistance is an urgent public health threat, particularly in hospital-acquired infections from
bacteria like Pseudomonas aeruginosa where few treatment options exist. Cationic antimicrobial peptides (CAPs)
are currently used as last resort treatments for infections with multidrug-resistant P. aeruginosa, but CAP-
resistant strains have been encountered. The proposed research aims to develop and characterize small
molecule inhibitors that block the CAP-resistance pathway for use as a combination therapy with a CAP to
clear infections with CAP-resistant P. aeruginosa.
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