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Phage Display of Dynamic Covalent Binding Motifs Enables Facile Development of Targeted Antibiotics.


ABSTRACT: Antibiotic resistance of bacterial pathogens poses an increasing threat to the wellbeing of our society and urgently calls for new strategies for infection diagnosis and antibiotic discovery. The antibiotic resistance problem at least partially arises from extensive use of broad-spectrum antibiotics. Ideally, for the treatment of infection, one would like to use a narrow-spectrum antibiotic that specifically targets and kills the disease-causing strain. This is particularly important considering the commensal bacterial species that are beneficial and sometimes even critical to the health of a human being. In this contribution, we describe a phage display platform that enables rapid identification of peptide probes for specific bacterial strains. The phage library described herein incorporates 2-acetylphenylboronic acid moieties to elicit dynamic covalent binding to the bacterial cell surface. Screening of the library against live bacterial cells yields submicromolar and highly specific binders for clinical strains of Staphylococcus aureus and Acinetobacter baumannii that display antibiotic resistance. We further show that the identified peptide probes can be readily converted to bactericidal agents that deliver generic toxins to kill the targeted bacterial strain with high specificity. The phage display platform described here is applicable to a wide array of bacterial strains, paving the way to facile diagnosis and development of strain-specific antibiotics.

SUBMITTER: McCarthy KA 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6477682 | biostudies-literature | 2018 May

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Phage Display of Dynamic Covalent Binding Motifs Enables Facile Development of Targeted Antibiotics.

McCarthy Kelly A KA   Kelly Michael A MA   Li Kaicheng K   Cambray Samantha S   Hosseini Azade S AS   van Opijnen Tim T   Gao Jianmin J  

Journal of the American Chemical Society 20180503 19


Antibiotic resistance of bacterial pathogens poses an increasing threat to the wellbeing of our society and urgently calls for new strategies for infection diagnosis and antibiotic discovery. The antibiotic resistance problem at least partially arises from extensive use of broad-spectrum antibiotics. Ideally, for the treatment of infection, one would like to use a narrow-spectrum antibiotic that specifically targets and kills the disease-causing strain. This is particularly important considering  ...[more]

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