Author
Listed:
- Xudong Hang
(Hainan Medical University
Nanjing Medical University)
- Weiqi Lan
(ShanghaiTech University)
- Huang Yanqiang
(Youjiang Medical University for Nationalities)
- Hongming Huang
(Hainan Medical University)
- Mingjing Zhang
(ShanghaiTech University)
- Liping Zeng
(Nanjing Medical University)
- Ting Shi
(Nanjing Medical University)
- Yuefan Bai
(Nanjing Medical University)
- Zhiyu Yang
(Nanjing Medical University)
- Shanwei Hu
(Nanjing Medical University)
- Junfan Wang
(ShanghaiTech University)
- Linlin Dong
(Nanjing Medical University)
- Qian Tong
(Nanjing Medical University)
- Jia Jia
(Nanjing Medical University)
- Shuzhuang Bi
(Hainan Medical University)
- Qianfeng Xia
(Hainan Medical University)
- Yan Gao
(ShanghaiTech University)
- Hongkai Bi
(Hainan Medical University
Nanjing Medical University)
Abstract
Helicobacter pylori, a globally significant pathogen, plays a central etiological role in diverse gastric pathologies ranging from chronic gastritis and peptic ulcers to gastric adenocarcinoma. Although conventional antibiotics effectively inhibit or kill growing helical H. pylori, metabolically dormant coccoid forms of H. pylori exhibit considerable tolerance, posing a persistent and clinically significant challenge. Here, we report napabucasin (2-acetylfuro-1,4-naphthoquinone) as a redox-cycling antibiotic with potent bactericidal activity against both drug-resistant helical and coccoid forms of H. pylori. Notably, napabucasin does not induce acquired resistance in vitro and demonstrates superior efficacy compared to standard triple therapy in murine infection models. Mechanistic studies reveal that napabucasin acts through 2-oxoglutarate:acceptor oxidoreductase (OOR)-catalyzed futile redox cycling, generating bactericidal levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Compared to menaquinone 6, a proposed physiological electron acceptor, napabucasin exhibits enhanced oxidative capacity. Structural, biochemical, and microbiological analyses identify Leu44 and Lys46 within the OorD subunit as critical residues for napabucasin recognition and catalysis. These findings establish OOR-mediated redox cycling as a robust antimicrobial strategy that sustains endogenous ROS production to combat refractory H. pylori infections.
Suggested Citation
Xudong Hang & Weiqi Lan & Huang Yanqiang & Hongming Huang & Mingjing Zhang & Liping Zeng & Ting Shi & Yuefan Bai & Zhiyu Yang & Shanwei Hu & Junfan Wang & Linlin Dong & Qian Tong & Jia Jia & Shuzhuang, 2025.
"2-oxoglutarate:acceptor oxidoreductase-catalyzed redox cycling effectively targets coccoid forms of Helicobacter pylori,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-18, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-025-62477-4
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-62477-4
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