Small-molecule inhibition of the Orientia tsutsugamushi deubiquitylating enzyme OtDUB impairs bacterial reproduction
Small-molecule inhibition of the Orientia tsutsugamushi deubiquitylating enzyme OtDUB impairs bacterial reproduction
Lee, M. J.; Hunt, J. R.; Cho, S.; Chiarelli, T. J.; Perry, C. N.; Carlyon, J. A.; Hochstrasser, M.
AbstractScrub typhus is a potentially fatal infectious disease caused by the obligate intracellular bacterium Orientia tsutsugamushi. While antibiotic treatment is generally effective, it requires extended treatment, and drug resistance and treatment failures have emerged. O. tsutsugamushi encodes a deubiquitylating enzyme, OtDUB, which interferes with host ubiquitin-dependent pathways. OtDUB cleaves ubiquitin from various substrates, but whether this activity can be selectively targeted by small molecules is unknown. Here we have screened a chemically diverse small-molecule library using a fluorescence-based deubiquitylation assay to identify potential inhibitors of OtDUB. Two compounds, gentisic acid and amiloride hydrochloride, inhibited OtDUB activity at low dosage, with little effect on the related Wolbachia CidB or yeast Ulp1 enzymes. Computational docking predicted the compounds engage regions near the OtDUB catalytic pocket, suggesting a competitive mode of inhibition; this was supported by enzyme kinetic analyses. Neither compound caused detectable cytotoxicity in mammalian cells. Amiloride hydrochloride treatment reduced both total cellular deubiquitylating activity and the O. tsutsugamushi bacterial load in infected cells. While the identified compounds are not optimized inhibitors, they establish that bacterial pathogen-encoded deubiquitylating enzymes can be targeted by small molecules. Overall, our results provide a framework for using selective inhibitors as tools to study DUB function in genetically intractable intracellular bacteria and as potential treatments for scrub typhus.