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A thiol-reactive Ru(II) ion, not CO release, underlies the potent antimicrobial and cytotoxic properties of CO-releasing molecule-3. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Carbon monoxide-releasing molecules (CORMs) are primarily metal carbonyl compounds used to deliver CO, a gasotransmitter, in biological studies, and show promise as antimicrobial agents against bacteria like Escherichia coli.
  • Research indicates that the antimicrobial effect of CORM-3 is mainly due to Ru(II), which binds to thiols, offering protection to both bacteria and mammalian cells through interactions with amino acids such as cysteine and reduced glutathione (GSH).
  • The study reveals a strong correlation between the binding affinities of amino acids and their ability to protect cells from CORM-3, suggesting a need to reconsider the biological impacts of CORMs in light of these findings.

Article Abstract

Carbon monoxide (CO)-releasing molecules (CORMs), mostly metal carbonyl compounds, are extensively used as experimental tools to deliver CO, a biological 'gasotransmitter', in mammalian systems. CORMs are also explored as potential novel antimicrobial drugs, effectively and rapidly killing bacteria in vitro and in animal models, but are reportedly benign towards mammalian cells. Ru-carbonyl CORMs, exemplified by CORM-3 (Ru(CO)Cl(glycinate)), exhibit the most potent antimicrobial effects against Escherichia coli. We demonstrate that CORM-3 releases little CO in buffers and cell culture media and that the active antimicrobial agent is Ru(II), which binds tightly to thiols. Thus, thiols and amino acids in complex growth media - such as histidine, methionine and oxidised glutathione, but most pertinently cysteine and reduced glutathione (GSH) - protect both bacterial and mammalian cells against CORM-3 by binding and sequestering Ru(II). No other amino acids exert significant protective effects. NMR reveals that CORM-3 binds cysteine and GSH in a 1:1 stoichiometry with dissociation constants, K, of about 5 μM, while histidine, GSSG and methionine are bound less tightly, with K values ranging between 800 and 9000 μM. There is a direct positive correlation between protection and amino acid affinity for CORM-3. Intracellular targets of CORM-3 in both bacterial and mammalian cells are therefore expected to include GSH, free Cys, His and Met residues and any molecules that contain these surface-exposed amino acids. These results necessitate a major reappraisal of the biological effects of CORM-3 and related CORMs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6067063PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2018.06.008DOI Listing

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