Structural and kinetic characterization of a β-lactamase-inhibitor protein
- 1 April 1994
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 368 (6472) , 657-660
- https://doi.org/10.1038/368657a0
Abstract
The past decade has seen an alarming worldwide increase in resistance to beta-lactam antibiotics among many pathogenic bacteria, which is due mainly to plasmid- or chromosomally encoded beta-lactamases that specifically cleave penicillin and cephalosporins, rendering them inactive. There is therefore a need to develop new strategies in the design of effective inhibitors of beta-lactamase. All the small-molecule inhibitors in clinical use are not very effective and are rapidly degraded. Furthermore, newly characterized mutants of the plasmid-mediated beta-lactamase TEM-1 are highly resistant to these small-molecule inhibitors, including clavulanic acid and tazobactam. It has been shown that Streptomyces clavuligerus produces an exocellular beta-lactamase inhibitory protein (BLIP; M(r) 17.5 K). Here we present data defining BLIP as the most effective known inhibitor of a variety of beta-lactamases, with Ki values in the subnanomolar to picomolar range. To identify those features in BLIP that make it such a potent inhibitor, we have determined its molecular structure at 2.1 A resolution. BLIP is a relatively flat molecule with a unique fold, comprising a tandem repeat of a 76-amino-acid domain. Each domain consists of a helix-loop-helix motif that packs against a four-stranded antiparallel beta-sheet (Fig. 1a). To our knowledge, BLIP is the first example of a protein inhibitor having two similarly folded domains that interact with and inhibit a single target enzyme.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Crystal structure of a yeast TBP/TATA-box complexNature, 1993
- Characterization of a new TEM-type beta-lactamase resistant to clavulanate, sulbactam, and tazobactam in a clinical isolate of Escherichia coliAntimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, 1993
- Crystal structure of Escherichia coli TEM1 β‐lactamase at 1.8 Å resolutionProteins-Structure Function and Bioinformatics, 1993
- Molecular structure of the acyl-enzyme intermediate in β-lactam hydrolysis at 1.7 Å resolutionNature, 1992
- The Crisis in Antibiotic ResistanceScience, 1992
- β-Lactamase of Bacillus licheniformis 749/C: Refinement at 2 Å resolution and analysis of hydrationJournal of Molecular Biology, 1991
- Refined crystal structure of β-lactamase from Staphylococcus aureus PC1 at 2.0 Å resolutionJournal of Molecular Biology, 1991
- Plasmid-Mediated Resistance to Third-Generation Cephalosporins Caused by Point Mutations in TEM-Type Penicillinase GenesClinical Infectious Diseases, 1988
- The inhibition of staphylococcal β-lactamase by clavulanic acidBiochemical Journal, 1979
- Clavulanic Acid: a Beta-Lactamase-Inhibiting Beta-Lactam from Streptomyces clavuligerusAntimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, 1977