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Microcin H47

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Microcin H47 (MccH47) is an antimicrobial peptide produced by some strains of Escherichia coli that has demonstrated inhibitory activity against enteric pathogens in vivo and has been heterologously overexpressed in proof-of-concept engineered probiotic applications.

Category
Functional Peptides
Catalog number
BAT-011949
Synonyms
MccH47
Sequence
GGAPATSANAAGAAAIVGALAGIPGGPLGVVVGAVSAGLTTGIGSTVGSGSASSSAGGGS
1. Microcin H47: A Class IIb Microcin with Potent Activity Against Multidrug Resistant Enterobacteriaceae
Jacob D Palmer, Benedikt M Mortzfeld, Emma Piattelli, Mark W Silby, Beth A McCormick, Vanni Bucci ACS Infect Dis. 2020 Apr 10;6(4):672-679. doi: 10.1021/acsinfecdis.9b00302. Epub 2020 Mar 2.
Microcin H47 (MccH47) is an antimicrobial peptide produced by some strains of Escherichia coli that has demonstrated inhibitory activity against enteric pathogens in vivo and has been heterologously overexpressed in proof-of-concept engineered probiotic applications. While most studies clearly demonstrate inhibitory activity against E. coli isolates, there are conflicting results on the qualitative capacity for MccH47 to inhibit strains of Salmonella. Here, we rectify these inconsistencies via the overexpression and purification of a form of MccH47, termed MccH47-monoglycosylated enterobactin (MccH47-MGE). We then use purified MccH47 to estimate minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) against a number of medically relevant Enterobacteriaceae, including Salmonella and numerous multidrug resistant (MDR) strains. While previous reports suggested that the spectrum of activity for MccH47 is quite narrow and restricted to activity against E. coli, our data demonstrate that MccH47 has broad and potent activity within the Enterobacteriaceae family, suggesting it as a candidate for further development toward treating MDR enteric infections.
2. Microcin H47 system: an Escherichia coli small genomic island with novel features
María F Azpiroz, Thais Bascuas, Magela Laviña PLoS One. 2011;6(10):e26179. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0026179. Epub 2011 Oct 11.
Genomic islands are DNA regions containing variable genetic information related to secondary metabolism. Frequently, they have the ability to excise from and integrate into replicons through site-specific recombination. Thus, they are usually flanked by short direct repeats that act as attachment sites, and contain genes for an integrase and an excisionase which carry out the genetic exchange. These mobility events would be at the basis of the horizontal transfer of genomic islands among bacteria.Microcin H47 is a ribosomally-synthesized antibacterial peptide that belongs to the group of chromosome-encoded microcins. The 13 kb-genetic system responsible for its production resides in the chromosome of the Escherichia coli H47 strain and is flanked by extensive and imperfect direct repeats. In this work, both excision and integration of the microcin H47 system were experimentally detected. The analyses were mainly performed in E. coli K12 cells carrying the microcin system cloned in a multicopy plasmid. As expected of a site-specific recombination event, the genetic exchange also occurred in a context deficient for homologous recombination. The DNA sequence of the attachment sites resulting from excision were hybrid between the sequences of the direct repeats. Unexpectedly, different hybrid attachment sites appeared which resulted from recombination in four segments of identity between the direct repeats. Genes encoding the trans-acting proteins responsible for the site-specific recombination were shown to be absent in the microcin H47 system. Therefore, they should be provided by the remaining genetic context, not only in the H47 strain but also in E. coli K12 cells, where both excision and integration occurred. Moreover, a survey of the attachment sites in data banks revealed that they are widely spread among E. coli strains. It is concluded that the microcin system is a small island -H47 genomic island- that would employ a parasitic strategy for its mobility.
3. The structural gene for microcin H47 encodes a peptide precursor with antibiotic activity
E Rodríguez, C Gaggero, M Laviña Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 1999 Sep;43(9):2176-82. doi: 10.1128/AAC.43.9.2176.
Microcin H47 is a bactericidal antibiotic produced by a naturally occurring Escherichia coli strain isolated in Uruguay. The microcin genetic system is located in the chromosome and extends over a 10-kb DNA segment containing the genes required for microcin synthesis, secretion, and immunity. The smallest microcin synthesis gene, mchB, was sequenced and shown to encode a highly hydrophobic peptide. An mchB-phoA gene fusion, which directed the synthesis of a hybrid bifunctional protein with both PhoA and microcin H47-like activities, was isolated. The results presented herein lead us to propose that microcin H47 is indeed a ribosomally synthesized peptide antibiotic and that its peptide precursor already has antibiotic activity of the same specificity as that of mature microcin.
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