Mapping DHPS Evolvability: Identification of Novel Evolutionarily Critical Sub-Structure through Evolutionary and Structural Analyses of DHPS

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Abstract

Protein evolution shapes pathogen adaptation-landscape, particularly in developing drug resistance. The rapid evolution of target proteins under antibiotic pressure leads to escape mutations leading to the problem of antibiotic resistance. A deep understanding of the evolutionary dynamics of antibiotic target proteins presents a plausible intervention strategy for disrupting the evolutionary trajectory of resistance. Mutations in Dihydropteroate synthase (DHPS), an essential folate pathway protein and a key target for sulfonamide antibiotics, result in reduced antibiotic binding, leading to resistance. Deploying an array of statistical analyses on the DHPS sequence-space and integrating those with deep mutational analysis and structure-based network-topology models we identified critical DHPS-subsequences. Our analysis of the frustration landscape of DHPS predicts how conformational and mutational changes shift the energy distributions within the DHPS substructures. Combining dimensionality reduction and optimality analysis we identified a substructure critical to DHPS evolvability, and computed its druggablity. Our integrated evolution and structure-informed framework identified a DHPS-substructure with significant evolutionary and structural impact. Targeting this region could constrain DHPS evolvability and disrupt the resistome, presenting a new avenue for antibiotic development and contributing to the broader effort to address the problem of antibiotic resistance.

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