Purine biosynthesis is the bottleneck in trimethoprim-treated Bacillus subtilis
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2016

Purpose: Trimethoprim is a folate biosynthesis inhibitor. Tetrahydrofolates are essential for the transfer of C1 units in several biochemical pathways including purine, thymine, methionine, and glycine biosynthesis. This study addressed the effects of folate biosynthesis inhibition on bacterial physiology.

Experimental design: Two complementary proteomic approaches were employed to analyze the response of Bacillus subtilis to trimethoprim. Acute changes in protein synthesis rates were monitored by radioactive pulse labeling of newly synthesized proteins and subsequent 2DE analysis. Changes in protein levels were detected using gel-free quantitative MS.

Results: Proteins involved in purine and histidine biosynthesis, the σB -dependent general stress response, and sporulation were upregulated. Most prominently, the PurR-regulon required for de novo purine biosynthesis was derepressed indicating purine depletion. The general stress response was activated energy dependently and in a subpopulation of treated cultures an early onset of sporulation was observed, most likely triggered by low guanosine triphosphate levels. Supplementation of adenosine triphosphate, adenosine, and guanosine to the medium substantially decreased antibacterial activity, showing that purine depletion becomes the bottleneck in trimethoprim-treated B. subtilis.

Conclusions and clinical relevance: The frequently prescribed antibiotic trimethoprim causes purine depletion in B. subtilis, which can be complemented by supplementing purines to the medium.

Antibiotic

σB-dependent general stress response.

Trimethoprim

Sporulation

Författare

Jennifer J. Stepanek

Ruhr-Universität Bochum

Sina Schäkermann

Ruhr-Universität Bochum

Michaela Wenzel

Ruhr-Universität Bochum

Universiteit Van Amsterdam

Pascal Prochnow

Ruhr-Universität Bochum

Julia E. Bandow

Ruhr-Universität Bochum

Proteomics - Clinical Applications

1862-8346 (ISSN) 1862-8354 (eISSN)

Vol. 10 9-10 1036-1048

Ämneskategorier (SSIF 2025)

Molekylärbiologi

Cellbiologi

Mikrobiologi

Genetik och genomik

Medicinsk bioinformatik och systembiologi

DOI

10.1002/prca.201600039

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Senast uppdaterat

2026-03-23