Fluorescent Trimethoprim Conjugate Probes To Assess Drug Accumulation in Wild Type and Mutant Escherichia coli

W Phetsang, R Pelingon, MS Butler, S Kc… - ACS infectious …, 2016 - ACS Publications
W Phetsang, R Pelingon, MS Butler, S Kc, ME Pitt, G Kaeslin, MA Cooper, MAT Blaskovich
ACS infectious diseases, 2016ACS Publications
Reduced susceptibility to antimicrobials in Gram-negative bacteria may result from multiple
resistance mechanisms, including increased efflux pump activity or reduced porin protein
expression. Up-regulation of the efflux pump system is closely associated with multidrug
resistance (MDR). To help investigate the role of efflux pumps on compound accumulation, a
fluorescence-based assay was developed using fluorescent derivatives of trimethoprim
(TMP), a broad-spectrum synthetic antibiotic that inhibits an intracellular target, dihydrofolate …
Reduced susceptibility to antimicrobials in Gram-negative bacteria may result from multiple resistance mechanisms, including increased efflux pump activity or reduced porin protein expression. Up-regulation of the efflux pump system is closely associated with multidrug resistance (MDR). To help investigate the role of efflux pumps on compound accumulation, a fluorescence-based assay was developed using fluorescent derivatives of trimethoprim (TMP), a broad-spectrum synthetic antibiotic that inhibits an intracellular target, dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR). Novel fluorescent TMP probes inhibited eDHFR activity with comparable potency to TMP, but did not kill or inhibit growth of wild type Escherichia coli. However, bactericidal activity was observed against an efflux pump deficient E. coli mutant strain (ΔtolC). A simple and quick fluorescence assay was developed to measure cellular accumulation of the TMP probe using either fluorescence spectroscopy or flow cytometry, with validation by LC-MS/MS. This fluorescence assay may provide a simple method to assess efflux pump activity with standard laboratory equipment.
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