You are cordially invited to join ……..                                   

                                    

Mario E. Rivera



Professor and William A. Pryor

Chair Department of Chemistry

Louisiana State University





Wednesday, October 25, 2023, 13:30 EDT



Manipulating iron storage and mobilization in the bacterial cell, a new 
strategy for developing antibiofilm





https://bnl.zoomgov.com/meeting/register/vJItd-6tqz0vEgchVuS3Ax9XRXZRcYlZKi0






Abstract

Biofilm-embedded cells can be up to 1000-fold more tolerant to antibiotic 
treatment than planktonic cells. Antibiotic tolerance is a condition which does 
not involve mutation and enables bacteria to survive in the presence of 
antibiotics. The antibiotic tolerance of biofilm-cells often renders 
antibiotics ineffective, even against bacterial strains that do not carry 
resistance-imparting mutations. A key component of iron metabolism is the 
storage of Fe(III) in bacterioferritin and its subsequent mobilization as 
Fe(II) to satisfy metabolic requirements. In P. aeruginosa, the mobilization of 
Fe(III) from bacterioferritin (Bfr) to the cytosol requires binding of a 
ferredoxin (Bfd) to reduce the stored Fe(III) and release it as the soluble 
Fe(II). This presentation will discuss evidence showing that deletion of the 
bfd gene triggers an irreversible accumulation of Fe(III) in BfrB, concomitant 
intracellular iron deficiency, metabolic dysregulation, and impaired biofilm 
development. The treatment of Pseudomonas aeruginosa mature biofilms with 
recently discovered small molecule inhibitors of the BfrB-Bfd complex kills 
biofilm-entrenched cells. The conservation of Bfr and Bfd amino acid sequences 
fromP. aeruginosa, Acinetobacter baumannii, and Klebsiella pneumoniae suggest 
the inhibitors may also be active against these pathogens, and susceptibility 
testing experiments with A. baumannii support this idea.





===============================================================================



Vivian Stojanoff, PhD

Education, Training, Outreach

User Program

p 1(631) 344 8375

e nsls.lifescien...@gmail.com

w https://www.bnl.gov/ps/lifesciences/<https://www.bnl.gov/ps/lsbr/>



Address:

Center for Biomolecular Structure

National Synchrotron Light Source II

Building 745

Brookhaven National Laboratory

Upton NY 11973



Supporting Grants: CBMS is supported by NIH-NIGMS #P30GM133893, and by the 
DOE-BER #KP1605010. Any work performed at NSLS-II is supported by DOE-BES  
under contract # DE-SC0012704.



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