Issue 12, 2007

Pilicides—small molecules targeting bacterial virulence

Abstract

In a time of emerging bacterial resistance there is a vital need for new targets and strategies in antibacterial therapy. Using uropathogenic Escherichia coli as a model pathogen we have developed a class of compounds, pilicides, which inhibit the formation of virulence-associated organelles termed pili. The pilicides interfere with a highly conserved bacterial assembly and secretion system called the chaperone–usher pathway, which is abundant in a vast number of Gram-negative pathogens and serves to assemble multi-protein surface fibers (pili/fimbriae). This class of compounds provides a platform to gain insight into important biological processes such as the molecular mechanisms of the chaperone–usher pathway and the sophisticated function of pili. Pili are primarily involved in bacterial adhesion, invasion and persistence to host defenses. On this basis, pilicides can aid the development of new antibacterial agents.

Graphical abstract: Pilicides—small molecules targeting bacterial virulence

Article information

Article type
Emerging Area
Submitted
14 Feb 2007
Accepted
26 Mar 2007
First published
20 Apr 2007

Org. Biomol. Chem., 2007,5, 1827-1834

Pilicides—small molecules targeting bacterial virulence

V. Åberg and F. Almqvist, Org. Biomol. Chem., 2007, 5, 1827 DOI: 10.1039/B702397A

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