University of Illinois: Two widely prescribed antibiotics — chloramphenicol and linezolid — may
fight bacteria in a different way from what scientists and doctors
thought for years, University of Illinois at Chicago researchers have
found. Instead of indiscriminately stopping protein synthesis, the drugs
put the brakes on the protein synthesis machinery only at specific
locations in the gene.
Ribosomes are among the most complex components in the cell,
responsible for churning out all the proteins a cell needs for survival.
In bacteria, ribosomes are the target of many important antibiotics.
The team of Alexander Mankin and Nora Vazquez-Laslop has conducted
groundbreaking research on the ribosome and antibiotics. In their latest
study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, they found that while chloramphenicol and linezolid attack the
catalytic center of the ribosome, they stop protein synthesis only at
specific checkpoints.
“Many antibiotics interfere with the growth of pathogenic bacteria by
inhibiting protein synthesis,” says Mankin, director of the UIC Center
for Biomolecular Sciences and professor of medicinal chemistry and
pharmacognosy. “This is done by targeting the catalytic center of the
bacterial ribosome, where proteins are being made. It is commonly
assumed that these drugs are universal inhibitors of protein synthesis
and should readily block the formation of every peptide bond.”
“But — we have shown that this is not necessarily the case,” said
Vazquez-Laslop, research associate professor of medicinal chemistry and
pharmacognosy.
A natural product, chloramphenicol is one of the oldest antibiotics
on the market. For decades it has been useful for many bacterial
infections, including meningitis, plague, cholera and typhoid fever.
Linezolid, a synthetic drug, is a newer antibiotic used to treat
serious infections — streptococci and methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), among others — caused by Gram-positive
bacteria that are resistant to other antibiotics. Mankin’s previous
research established the site of action and mechanism of resistance to
linezolid.
While the antibiotics are very different, they each bind to the
ribosome’s catalytic center, where they were expected to inhibit
formation of any peptide bond that links the components of the protein
chain into a long biopolymer. In simple enzymes, an inhibitor that
invades the catalytic center simply stops the enzyme from doing its job.
This, Mankin said, had been what scientists had believed was also true
for antibiotics that target the ribosome.
“Contrary to this view, the activity of chloramphenicol and linezolid
critically depends on the nature of specific amino acids of the nascent
chain carried by the ribosome and by the identity of the next amino
acid to be connected to a growing protein,” Vazquez-Laslop said. “These
findings indicate that the nascent protein modulates the properties of
the ribosomal catalytic center and affects binding of its ligands,
including antibiotics.”
Combining genomics and biochemistry has allowed the UIC researchers to better understand how the antibiotics work.
“If you know how these inhibitors work, you can make better drugs and
make them better tools for research,” said Mankin. “You can also use
them more efficiently to treat human and animal diseases.”