Popis: |
Position 4 analogues of d-alanine in the peptide subunit of uridine 5'-diphosphate-N-acetylmuramyl-Ala(1)-dGlu(2)- Lys(3)-dAla(4)-dAla(5) have a significant inhibitory effect on penicillin-sensitive peptidoglycan synthesis in Gaffkya homari (C. V. Carpenter, S. Goyer, and F. C. Neuhaus, 1976). The specificity profile of this in vitro system has been used as a basis for designing analogues with potential antibacterial activity. To circumvent the specificity determinants exerted by d-alanine:d-alanine ligase (adenosine 5'-diphosphate), attention was directed to dd-dipeptides of the type d-alanyl-analogue-d-alanine as a method for incorporating analogues into position 4 of the peptide subunit in vivo. Of the three dipeptides, dAbu-dAla, dNva-dAla, and dVal-dAla, only dNva-dAla (5 x 10(-4) M) inhibited the growth of Escherichia coli W in the presence of 5 x 10(-6) M d-cycloserine. This concentration of d-cycloserine did not inhibit growth, but it potentiated the bactericidal activity of the dipeptide. The lack of antibacterial activity observed with dAbu-dAla and dVal-dAla was correlated with the poor ability of these dipeptides to be taken up via the dipeptide transport system of this organism. Prevention of lysis induced by dNva-dAla plus d-cycloserine by certain dipeptides and not by others supported this correlation. It is proposed that the d-norvalyl residue of the dipeptide is incorporated in vivo into position 4 of the peptide subunit of peptidoglycan, and that this subunit is not an effective substrate in the reaction(s) catalyzed by the penicillin-susceptible enzyme(s) of cross-linked peptidoglycan synthesis. |