Mapping dihydropteroate synthase evolvability through identification of a novel evolutionarily critical substructure

Autor/innen

  • D. Sanyal
  • A Shivram
  • D. Pandey
  • S. Banerjee
  • V.N. Uversky
  • D. Muzata
  • A. Chivukula
  • R. Jasuja
  • K. Chattopadhyay
  • S. Chowdhury

Journal

  • International Journal of Biological Macromolecules

Quellenangabe

  • Int J Biol Macromol 311 (Part 2): 143325

Zusammenfassung

  • Protein evolution shapes pathogen adaptation-landscape, particularly in developing drug resistance. The rapid evolution of target proteins under antibiotic pressure leads to escape mutations, resulting in antibiotic resistance. A deep understanding of the evolutionary dynamics of antibiotic target proteins presents a plausible intervention strategy for disrupting the resistance trajectory. Mutations in Dihydropteroate synthase (DHPS), an essential folate pathway protein and sulfonamide antibiotic target, reduce antibiotic binding leading to anti-folate resistance. Deploying statistical analyses on the DHPS sequence-space and integrating deep mutational analysis with structure-based network-topology models, we identified critical DHPS subsequences. Our frustration landscape analysis suggests how conformational and mutational changes redistribute energy within DHPS substructures. We present an epistasis-based fitness prediction model that simulates DHPS adaptive walks, identifying residue positions that shape evolutionary constraints. Our optimality analysis revealed a substructure central to DHPS evolvability, and we assessed its druggability. Combining evolution and structure, this integrated framework identifies a DHPS substructure with significant evolutionary and structural impact. Targeting this region may constrain DHPS evolvability and slow resistance emergence, offering new directions for antibiotic development.


DOI

doi:10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2025.143325