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A small-molecular inhibitor against Proteus mirabilis urease to treat catheter-associated urinary tract infections

A small-molecular inhibitor against Proteus mirabilis urease to treat catheter-associated urinary tract infections
A small-molecular inhibitor against Proteus mirabilis urease to treat catheter-associated urinary tract infections
Infection and blockage of indwelling urinary catheters is significant owing to its high incidence rate and severe medical consequences. Bacterial enzymes are employed as targets for small molecular intervention in human bacterial infections. Urease is a metalloenzyme known to play a crucial role in the pathogenesis and virulence of catheter-associated Proteus mirabilis infection. Targeting urease as a therapeutic candidate facilitates the disarming of bacterial virulence without affecting bacterial fitness, thereby limiting the selective pressure placed on the invading population and lowering the rate at which it will acquire resistance. We describe the design, synthesis, and in vitro evaluation of the small molecular enzyme inhibitor 2-mercaptoacetamide (2-MA), which can prevent encrustation and blockage of urinary catheters in a physiologically representative in vitro model of the catheterized urinary tract. 2-MA is a structural analogue of urea, showing promising competitive activity against urease. In silico docking experiments demonstrated 2-MA’s competitive inhibition, whilst further quantum level modelling suggests two possible binding mechanisms.
2045-2322
Milo, Scarlet
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Heylen, Rachel A.
6cb301a4-25f4-446f-bb1d-1353a4818320
Glancy, John
d8db2f54-e16b-430c-a939-ff132c84ace8
Williams, George T.
26810522-92ef-4b61-a766-582bf15be280
Patenall, Bethany L.
6307b448-a628-4242-bec2-b7dd2ac7d21a
Hathaway, Hollie J.
acc628f7-b28d-4e53-9771-5aff4ecf88f5
Thet, Naing T.
ce91e7c9-d39d-431b-bd64-e7e97e9f8541
Allinson, Sarah L.
ed2052c6-93eb-435e-af2a-1c9c1950ace1
Laabei, Maisem
26fa8be9-34fa-4033-9517-f96c20b87ede
Jenkins, A. Toby A.
e0e4ebe3-c2d6-4aae-81eb-66923f6f98dd
Milo, Scarlet
e030c051-2469-4660-aa1a-057da4878f3f
Heylen, Rachel A.
6cb301a4-25f4-446f-bb1d-1353a4818320
Glancy, John
d8db2f54-e16b-430c-a939-ff132c84ace8
Williams, George T.
26810522-92ef-4b61-a766-582bf15be280
Patenall, Bethany L.
6307b448-a628-4242-bec2-b7dd2ac7d21a
Hathaway, Hollie J.
acc628f7-b28d-4e53-9771-5aff4ecf88f5
Thet, Naing T.
ce91e7c9-d39d-431b-bd64-e7e97e9f8541
Allinson, Sarah L.
ed2052c6-93eb-435e-af2a-1c9c1950ace1
Laabei, Maisem
26fa8be9-34fa-4033-9517-f96c20b87ede
Jenkins, A. Toby A.
e0e4ebe3-c2d6-4aae-81eb-66923f6f98dd

Milo, Scarlet, Heylen, Rachel A., Glancy, John, Williams, George T., Patenall, Bethany L., Hathaway, Hollie J., Thet, Naing T., Allinson, Sarah L., Laabei, Maisem and Jenkins, A. Toby A. (2021) A small-molecular inhibitor against Proteus mirabilis urease to treat catheter-associated urinary tract infections. Scientific Reports, 11, [3726]. (doi:10.1038/s41598-021-83257-2).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Infection and blockage of indwelling urinary catheters is significant owing to its high incidence rate and severe medical consequences. Bacterial enzymes are employed as targets for small molecular intervention in human bacterial infections. Urease is a metalloenzyme known to play a crucial role in the pathogenesis and virulence of catheter-associated Proteus mirabilis infection. Targeting urease as a therapeutic candidate facilitates the disarming of bacterial virulence without affecting bacterial fitness, thereby limiting the selective pressure placed on the invading population and lowering the rate at which it will acquire resistance. We describe the design, synthesis, and in vitro evaluation of the small molecular enzyme inhibitor 2-mercaptoacetamide (2-MA), which can prevent encrustation and blockage of urinary catheters in a physiologically representative in vitro model of the catheterized urinary tract. 2-MA is a structural analogue of urea, showing promising competitive activity against urease. In silico docking experiments demonstrated 2-MA’s competitive inhibition, whilst further quantum level modelling suggests two possible binding mechanisms.

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Accepted/In Press date: 26 January 2021
Published date: 12 February 2021
Additional Information: Funding Scarlet Milo and Rachel Heylen would like to thank the Annette Trust for their funding. Rachel Heylen and John Glancy (Centre for Sustainable and Circular Technologies) would like to thank the EPSRC Doctoral Training Account and George Williams would like to thank the University of Kent GCDC for their funding. Bethany Patenall would like to thank the James Tudor Foundation and Mr and Mrs A. Watson for their funding

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 474080
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/474080
ISSN: 2045-2322
PURE UUID: e650a953-af7b-4581-8908-26762eabdc99
ORCID for George T. Williams: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6162-8895

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Date deposited: 10 Feb 2023 18:03
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:17

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Contributors

Author: Scarlet Milo
Author: Rachel A. Heylen
Author: John Glancy
Author: George T. Williams ORCID iD
Author: Bethany L. Patenall
Author: Hollie J. Hathaway
Author: Naing T. Thet
Author: Sarah L. Allinson
Author: Maisem Laabei
Author: A. Toby A. Jenkins

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