Conformational and Quantitative Characterization of Oritavancin–Peptidoglycan Complexes in Whole Cells of Staphylococcus aureus by in Vivo 13C and 15N Labeling

2006 
Solid-state NMR has been used to examine the cell walls of intact whole cells of Staphyloccus aureus grown on media containing d -[1- 13 C]alanine, [ 15 N]glycine, and the alanine racemase inhibitor, alaphosphin. The results of in situ site-selective, four-frequency NMR experiments show directly for the first time that (i) 54% of the cell-wall peptidoglycan stems have d -alanine termini and 46%, d -alanine- d -alanine termini; (ii) the molar ratio of stems ending in d -alanine to esterified alditol repeats of cell-wall teichoic and lipoteichoic acids is 3:2; and (iii) 50% of the mature cell-wall binding sites for a fluorinated oritavancin analogue consist of two nearest-neighbor peptide stems of different glycan strands. The drug is bound to the d -Ala- d -Ala terminus of one stem and is proximate to the bridging pentaglycyl segment that cross-links the two stems. Structural details of the binding site are revealed in a model of the glycopeptidepeptidoglycan interaction produced by molecular dynamics simulations with internuclear distance restraints determined by NMR.
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