Abstract.
AcrAB–TolC is the most important multidrug efflux pump system of Gram-negative
bacteria, responsible for their resistance to lipophilic and amphiphilic
drugs. In this work, a molecular graphics study of the pump components
AcrB and TolC, 16 b-lactam antibiotics and 7
other substrates, as well as of AcrB–substrate complexes, was performed
in order to give a mechanistic proposal for the efflux process at molecular
level. AcrAB–TolC is a proton-dependent electromechanical device which
opens to extrude drugs from the bacterial periplasm and perhaps cytoplasm,
by means of a series of structural changes within the complex and its components
AcrA, AcrB and TolC. These changes are initiated by protonation and disruption
of salt bridges and certain hydrogen bonds, and are followed by conformational
changes in which a number of intra- and interchain interactions are rearranged.
Molecular properties of b-lactams accounting
for their lipophilicity, shape/conformation and other sterical features,
polar/charge group distribution and other electronic properties, and hydrogen
bonding potency determine their interaction with polar headpieces of the
inner membrane, recognition and binding to receptors of AcrB and TolC.
The orientation of the b-lactam molecular dipoles
with respect the efflux system is maintained during the drug efflux. Elongated
cylinder-like b-lactam antibiotics with lipophylic
side chains, a significantly negative component of the dipole moment and
low hydrogen bonding capacity seem to be good substrates of AcrAB–TolC.
Keywords.
AcrAB–TolC efflux pump; b-Lactam antibiotics;
Multidrug resistance; Molecular graphics; Vestibules; Pore.
Keywords Plus.