β-Lactams from the Ocean

Mar Drugs. 2023 Jan 25;21(2):86. doi: 10.3390/md21020086.

Abstract

The title of this essay is as much a question as it is a statement. The discovery of the β-lactam antibiotics-including penicillins, cephalosporins, and carbapenems-as largely (if not exclusively) secondary metabolites of terrestrial fungi and bacteria, transformed modern medicine. The antibiotic β-lactams inactivate essential enzymes of bacterial cell-wall biosynthesis. Moreover, the ability of the β-lactams to function as enzyme inhibitors is of such great medical value, that inhibitors of the enzymes which degrade hydrolytically the β-lactams, the β-lactamases, have equal value. Given this privileged status for the β-lactam ring, it is therefore a disappointment that the exemplification of this ring in marine secondary metabolites is sparse. It may be that biologically active marine β-lactams are there, and simply have yet to be encountered. In this report, we posit a second explanation: that the value of the β-lactam to secure an ecological advantage in the marine environment might be compromised by its close structural similarity to the β-lactones of quorum sensing. The steric and reactivity similarities between the β-lactams and the β-lactones represent an outside-of-the-box opportunity for correlating new structures and new enzyme targets for the discovery of compelling biological activities.

Keywords: AHL, N-acylhomoserine lactone; PBP, penicillin-binding protein; enzyme inhibitors; quorum quenching; salinosporamide; β-lactonase.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Anti-Bacterial Agents* / pharmacology
  • Bacteria / metabolism
  • Lactones
  • Oceans and Seas
  • Penicillins / metabolism
  • Penicillins / pharmacology
  • beta-Lactamases
  • beta-Lactams* / metabolism
  • beta-Lactams* / pharmacology

Substances

  • beta-Lactams
  • Anti-Bacterial Agents
  • Penicillins
  • beta-Lactamases
  • Lactones