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Muropeptides in Pseudomonas aeruginosa and their Role as Elicitors of β‐Lactam‐Antibiotic Resistance
Authors:Dr Mijoon Lee  Supurna Dhar  Dr Stefania De?Benedetti  Dr Dusan Hesek  Dr Bill Boggess  Dr Blas Blázquez  Prof Kalai Mathee  Prof Shahriar Mobashery
Institution:1. Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN, USA;2. Department of Human and Molecular Genetics, Herbert Wertheim College of Medicine, Florida International University, Miami, FL, USA
Abstract:Muropeptides are a group of bacterial natural products generated from the cell wall in the course of its turnover. These compounds are cell‐wall recycling intermediates and are also involved in signaling within the bacterium. However, the identity of these signaling molecules remains elusive. The identification and characterization of 20 muropeptides from Pseudomonas aeruginosa is described. The least abundant of these metabolites is present at 100 and the most abundant at 55,000 molecules per bacterium. Analysis of these muropeptides under conditions of induction of resistance to a β‐lactam antibiotic identified two signaling muropeptides (N‐acetylglucosamine‐1,6‐anhydro‐N‐acetylmuramyl pentapeptide and 1,6‐anhydro‐N‐acetylmuramyl pentapeptide). Authentic synthetic samples of these metabolites were shown to activate expression of β‐lactamase in the absence of any β‐lactam antibiotic, thus indicating that they serve as chemical signals in this complex biochemical pathway.
Keywords:β  -lactamase  antibiotic resistance  bacteria  muropeptides  peptidoglycan
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