Gram-Negative bacteria can resist the action of antibiotics by simply decreasing the internal concentration of antibiotics. This is achieved by controlling both the influx and efflux through the outer membrane. Two classes of structures are involved, i.e., general porins (influx) and efflux pumps (efflux). The former are membrane channels that work by simple diffusion driven by the gradient concentration, while the latter span both the inner and outer membrane and have a more complex mechanism that requires energy to work against the gradient of the concentration (nikaido). Both porins and efflux pumps play an important role in a number of resistance mechanisms that bacteria have developed against a large spectrum of antibiotics, often belonging to different families. This phenomenon is known as bacterial multidrug resistance (MDR).
The serious concern due to the spread of MDR bacteria outside hospitals as well as due to some re-emerging pathogens such as the tuberculosis appears in a moment where almost no new drugs are in preparation and most pharmaceutical companies have abandoned this research field: nowadays we need a new generation of antibiotics able to overcome the different mechanisms of resistance (Payne, Vicente). Any of such new solutions to bacterial resistance has to take care of both influx and efflux systems: in order to kill bacteria it is necessary but no sufficient to design new antibiotics which efficiently diffuse through the influx systems. It is necessary that the concentration of antibiotics inside the bacteria has not to be reduced as a consequence of the efflux system. Thus, this latter should be inhibited, but this alone is not sufficient to kill bacteria, one always needs an antibiotic.
As already shown, all the processes involved in efflux and influx subtly depend on electrostatics and other microscopic interactions at the level of single amino acids (Nestorovich). Therefore, the path leading to the next generation of antibiotics passes through the knowledge of the molecular processes and structures governing resistance.
Nowdays, all-atom simulations have achieved the maturity of supporting experimental studies in many areas of science. In particular, through this successful approach, detailed information can be obtained about structure, dynamics and energetics of the system of interest. These properties are fundamental for the rational drug-design (Barker).
Influx and efflux systems are responsible of a large part of the resistance. Therefore, the design of new drugs requires the knowledge of the structure and functioning of both, porins and efflux pumps. The X-ray structures of several bacterial porins, e.g. OmpF and OmpC, have been solved at high resolution and represent an excellent starting point for theoretical and experimental investigation (Cowan et al, Baslé et al.). However, for many other porins, extracted from resistant strains, only primary sequences are known. This point leads to the first issue to address in the proposed workshop: is the combined scheme bioinformatics+MD able to provide reasonable structures for unknown porins? Are these predictions good enough to be used in drug-design?
For efflux pumps the problem is even more challenging: besides the little number of known structures, it is not clear how and through which paths the drugs are extruded from the bacteria. In addition, in the case of the RND pumps (the major superfamily of gram-negative bacteria), the way that the subunits are spatially organized (with respect to the two spanning membranes) is poorly understood (Higgins, Lomoskaya et al). This leads to the second topic of our workshop: how can simulations help to decipher the spatial organization of efflux pumps and their structure-function relationship in general?
References
Germany
Ulrich Kleinekathöfer
(Jacobs University Bremen)
- Organiser
Italy
Matteo Ceccarelli
(University of Cagliari)
- Organiser
Paolo Ruggerone
(University of Cagliari)
- Organiser