Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Francisca Vicente is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Francisca Vicente.


Nature | 2006

Platensimycin is a selective FabF inhibitor with potent antibiotic properties

Jun Wang; Stephen M. Soisson; Katherine Young; Wesley L. Shoop; Srinivas Kodali; Andrew Galgoci; Ronald E. Painter; Gopalakrishnan Parthasarathy; Yui S. Tang; Richard D. Cummings; Sookhee Ha; Karen Dorso; Mary Motyl; Hiranthi Jayasuriya; John G. Ondeyka; Kithsiri Herath; Chaowei Zhang; Lorraine D. Hernandez; John J. Allocco; Angela Basilio; José R. Tormo; Olga Genilloud; Francisca Vicente; Fernando Pelaez; Lawrence F. Colwell; Sang Ho Lee; Bruce Michael; Thomas J. Felcetto; Charles Gill; Lynn L. Silver

Bacterial infection remains a serious threat to human lives because of emerging resistance to existing antibiotics. Although the scientific community has avidly pursued the discovery of new antibiotics that interact with new targets, these efforts have met with limited success since the early 1960s. Here we report the discovery of platensimycin, a previously unknown class of antibiotics produced by Streptomyces platensis. Platensimycin demonstrates strong, broad-spectrum Gram-positive antibacterial activity by selectively inhibiting cellular lipid biosynthesis. We show that this anti-bacterial effect is exerted through the selective targeting of β-ketoacyl-(acyl-carrier-protein (ACP)) synthase I/II (FabF/B) in the synthetic pathway of fatty acids. Direct binding assays show that platensimycin interacts specifically with the acyl-enzyme intermediate of the target protein, and X-ray crystallographic studies reveal that a specific conformational change that occurs on acylation must take place before the inhibitor can bind. Treatment with platensimycin eradicates Staphylococcus aureus infection in mice. Because of its unique mode of action, platensimycin shows no cross-resistance to other key antibiotic-resistant strains tested, including methicillin-resistant S. aureus, vancomycin-intermediate S. aureus and vancomycin-resistant enterococci. Platensimycin is the most potent inhibitor reported for the FabF/B condensing enzymes, and is the only inhibitor of these targets that shows broad-spectrum activity, in vivo efficacy and no observed toxicity.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Discovery of platencin, a dual FabF and FabH inhibitor with in vivo antibiotic properties.

Jun Wang; Srinivas Kodali; Sang Ho Lee; Andrew Galgoci; Ronald E. Painter; Karen Dorso; Fred Racine; Mary Motyl; Lorraine D. Hernandez; Elizabeth Tinney; Steven L. Colletti; Kithsiri Herath; Richard D. Cummings; Oscar Salazar; Ignacio González; Angela Basilio; Francisca Vicente; Olga Genilloud; Fernando Pelaez; Hiranthi Jayasuriya; Katherine Young; Doris F. Cully; Sheo B. Singh

Emergence of bacterial resistance is a major issue for all classes of antibiotics; therefore, the identification of new classes is critically needed. Recently we reported the discovery of platensimycin by screening natural product extracts using a target-based whole-cell strategy with antisense silencing technology in concert with cell free biochemical validations. Continued screening efforts led to the discovery of platencin, a novel natural product that is chemically and biologically related but different from platensimycin. Platencin exhibits a broad-spectrum Gram-positive antibacterial activity through inhibition of fatty acid biosynthesis. It does not exhibit cross-resistance to key antibiotic resistant strains tested, including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, vancomycin-intermediate S. aureus, and vancomycin-resistant Enterococci. Platencin shows potent in vivo efficacy without any observed toxicity. It targets two essential proteins, β-ketoacyl-[acyl carrier protein (ACP)] synthase II (FabF) and III (FabH) with IC50 values of 1.95 and 3.91 μg/ml, respectively, whereas platensimycin targets only FabF (IC50 = 0.13 μg/ml) in S. aureus, emphasizing the fact that more antibiotics with novel structures and new modes of action can be discovered by using this antisense differential sensitivity whole-cell screening paradigm.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2000

Discovery of Novel Antifungal (1,3)-β-d-Glucan Synthase Inhibitors

Janet C. Onishi; Maria S. Meinz; J. Thompson; J. Curotto; S Dreikorn; M. Rosenbach; Cameron M. Douglas; George K. Abruzzo; Amy M. Flattery; Li Kong; A. Cabello; Francisca Vicente; Fernando Pelaez; M. T. Diez; I. Martin; Gerald F. Bills; Robert A. Giacobbe; Anne W. Dombrowski; Robert E. Schwartz; Sandra A. Morris; Guy H. Harris; A. Tsipouras; Kenneth E. Wilson; Myra B. Kurtz

ABSTRACT The increasing incidence of life-threatening fungal infections has driven the search for new, broad-spectrum fungicidal agents that can be used for treatment and prophylaxis in immunocompromised patients. Natural-product inhibitors of cell wall (1,3)-β-d-glucan synthase such as lipopeptide pneumocandins and echinocandins as well as the glycolipid papulacandins have been evaluated as potential therapeutics for the last two decades. As a result, MK-0991 (caspofungin acetate; Cancidas), a semisynthetic analogue of pneumocandin Bo, is being developed as a broad-spectrum parenteral agent for the treatment of aspergillosis and candidiasis. This and other lipopeptide antifungal agents have limited oral bioavailability. Thus, we have sought new chemical structures with the mode of action of lipopeptide antifungal agents but with the potential for oral absorption. Results of natural-product screening by a series of newly developed methods has led to the identification of four acidic terpenoid (1,3)-β-d-glucan synthase inhibitors. Of the four compounds, the in vitro antifungal activity of one, enfumafungin, is comparable to that of L-733560, a close analogue of MK-0991. Like the lipopeptides, enfumafungin specifically inhibits glucan synthesis in whole cells and in (1,3)-β-d-glucan synthase assays, alters the morphologies of yeasts and molds, and produces a unique response in Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains with point mutations in FKS1, the gene which encodes the large subunit of glucan synthase.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2006

Discovery of FabH/FabF Inhibitors from Natural Products

Katherine Young; Hiranthi Jayasuriya; John G. Ondeyka; Kithsiri Herath; Chaowei Zhang; Srinivas Kodali; Andrew Galgoci; Ronald E. Painter; Vickie Brown-Driver; Robert T. Yamamoto; Lynn L. Silver; Yingcong Zheng; Judith I. Ventura; Janet M. Sigmund; Sookhee Ha; Angela Basilio; Francisca Vicente; José R. Tormo; Fernando Pelaez; Phil Youngman; Doris F. Cully; John F. Barrett; Dennis M. Schmatz; Sheo B. Singh; Jun Wang

ABSTRACT Condensing enzymes are essential in type II fatty acid synthesis and are promising targets for antibacterial drug discovery. Recently, a new approach using a xylose-inducible plasmid to express antisense RNA in Staphylococcus aureus has been described; however, the actual mechanism was not delineated. In this paper, the mechanism of decreased target protein production by expression of antisense RNA was investigated using Northern blotting. This revealed that the antisense RNA acts posttranscriptionally by targeting mRNA, leading to 5′ mRNA degradation. Using this technology, a two-plate assay was developed in order to identify FabF/FabH target-specific cell-permeable inhibitors by screening of natural product extracts. Over 250,000 natural product fermentation broths were screened and then confirmed in biochemical assays, yielding a hit rate of 0.1%. All known natural product FabH and FabF inhibitors, including cerulenin, thiolactomycin, thiotetromycin, and Tü3010, were discovered using this whole-cell mechanism-based screening approach. Phomallenic acids, which are new inhibitors of FabF, were also discovered. These new inhibitors exhibited target selectivity in the gel elongation assay and in the whole-cell-based two-plate assay. Phomallenic acid C showed good antibacterial activity, about 20-fold better than that of thiolactomycin and cerulenin, against S. aureus. It exhibited a spectrum of antibacterial activity against clinically important pathogens including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, Bacillus subtilis, and Haemophilus influenzae.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Discovery of a small molecule that inhibits cell division by blocking FtsZ, a novel therapeutic target of antibiotics

Jun Wang; Andrew Galgoci; Srinivas Kodali; Kithsiri Herath; Hiranthi Jayasuriya; Karen Dorso; Francisca Vicente; Antonio Gonzalez; Doris F. Cully; David Bramhill; Sheo B. Singh

The emergence of bacterial resistance to antibiotics is a major health problem and, therefore, it is critical to develop new antibiotics with novel modes of action. FtsZ, a tubulin-like GTPase, plays an essential role in bacterial cell division, and its homologs are present in almost all eubacteria and archaea. During cell division, FtsZ forms polymers in the presence of GTP that recruit other division proteins to make the cell division apparatus. Therefore, inhibition of FtsZ polymerization will prevent cells from dividing, leading to cell death. Using a fluorescent FtsZ polymerization assay, the screening of >100,000 extracts of microbial fermentation broths and plants followed by fractionation led to the identification of viriditoxin, which blocked FtsZ polymerization with an IC50 of 8.2 μg/ml and concomitant GTPase inhibition with an IC50 of 7.0 μg/ml. That the mode of antibacterial action of viriditoxin is via inhibition of FtsZ was confirmed by the observation of its effects on cell morphology, macromolecular synthesis, DNA-damage response, and increased minimum inhibitory concentration as a result of an increase in the expression of the FtsZ protein. Viriditoxin exhibited broad-spectrum antibacterial activity against clinically relevant Gram-positive pathogens, including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus and vancomycin-resistant Enterococci, without affecting the viability of eukaryotic cells.


Fungal Biology | 1998

Endophytic fungi from plants living on gypsum soils as a source of secondary metabolites with antimicrobial activity

Fernando Pelaez; Javier Collado; F. Arenal; Angela Basilio; Angeles Cabello; M.T. Díez Matas; Juan B. García; A. González del Val; V. González; Julian Gorrochategui; Pilar Hernández; Isabel Martin; Gonzalo Platas; Francisca Vicente

Endophytic fungi were isolated from nine plant species growing on gypsum and saline soils in central Spain. The plants sampled were Arundo donax, Afriplex halimus, Diplotaxis erucoides, Ephedra nebrodensis, Phragmites australis, Rosmarinus officinalis, Scirpus holoschoenus, S maritimus and Stipa tenacissima. A total of 152 fungal species were recovered from 2880 samples of leaves, stems or twigs, taken from 45 individual plants. Ephedra and Rosmarinus showed the highest diversity of endophytes, whereas both species of Scirpus showed the lowest. The most frequently isolated fungi were Allernaria alternata, Sporormiella intermedia, Rhizoctonia sp., Epicoccum purpurascens, Pleospora herbarum, Cladosporium herbarum, Sporormiella australis and a sterile fungus. A total of 187 strains belonging to 136 species were tested for the production of antimicrobial activities, using a panel of bacteria and yeasts, some of them of clinical relevance. Production of antimicrobial compounds was detected in 45 strains, belonging to 37 species. Large differences were observed among isolates from the same species, with respect to their ability to produce metabolites with antimicrobial activity.


Journal of Applied Microbiology | 2008

Enhancement of antibiotic and secondary metabolite detection from filamentous fungi by growth on nutritional arrays

Gerald F. Bills; Gonzalo Platas; Asunción Fillola; María Rosa Jiménez; Javier Collado; Francisca Vicente; Jesús Martín; Antonio González; J. Bur-Zimmermann; José R. Tormo; Fernando Pelaez

Aims:  We asked to what extent does the application of the OSMAC (one strain, many compounds) approach lead to enhanced detection of antibiotics and secondary metabolites in fungi? Protocols for bacterial microfermentations were adapted to grow fungi in nutritional arrays.


Systematic and Applied Microbiology | 2000

The Discovery of Enfumafungin, a Novel Antifungal Compound Produced by an Endophytic Hormonema Species Biological Activity and Taxonomy of the Producing Organisms

Fernando Pelaez; Angeles Cabello; Gonzalo Platas; Maria Teresa Diez; Antonio González del Val; Angela Basilio; Isabel Martán; Francisca Vicente; Gerald F. Bills; Robert A. Giacobbe; Robert E. Schwartz; Janet C. Onishi; Maria S. Meinz; George K. Abruzzo; Amy M. Flattery; Li Kong; Myra B. Kurtz

In a screening of natural products with antifungal activity derived from endophytic fungi, we detected a potent activity in a culture belonging to the form-genus Hormonema, isolated from leaves of Juniperus communis. The compound is a new triterpene glycoside, showing an antifungal activity highly potent in vitro against Candida and Aspergillus and with moderate efficacy in an in vivo mouse model of disseminated candidiasis. The agent is especially interesting since its antifungal spectrum and its effect on morphology of Aspergillus fumigatus is comparable to that of the glucan synthase inhibitor pneumocandin B,,, the natural precursor of the clinical candidate MK-0991 (caspofungin acetate). An additional search for other Hormonema isolates producing improved titers or derivatives resulted in the isolation of two more strains recovered from the same plant host showing identical activity. The producing isolates were compared with other non-producing Hormonema strains by DNA fingerprinting and sequencing of the rDNA internal transcribed spacers. Comparison of rDNA sequences with other fungal species suggests that the producing fungus could be an undetermined Kabatina species. Kabatina is a coelomycetous genus whose members are known to produce Hormonema-like states in culture.


Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2011

Overexpression of the trichodiene synthase gene tri5 increases trichodermin production and antimicrobial activity in Trichoderma brevicompactum

Anamariela Tijerino; R. Elena Cardoza; Javier Moraga; Mónica G. Malmierca; Francisca Vicente; Josefina Aleu; Isidro G. Collado; Santiago Gutiérrez; Enrique Monte; Rosa Hermosa

Trichoderma brevicompactum produces trichodermin, a simple trichothecene-type toxin that shares the first steps of the sesquiterpene biosynthetic pathway with other phytotoxic trichothecenes from Fusarium spp. Trichodiene synthase catalyses the conversion of farnesyl pyrophosphate to trichodiene and it is encoded by the tri5 gene that was cloned and analysed functionally by homologous overexpression in T. brevicompactum. tri5 expression was up-regulated in media with glucose, H(2)O(2) or glycerol. tri5 repression was observed in cultures supplemented with the antioxidants ferulic acid and tyrosol. Acetone extracts of tri5-overexpressing transformants displayed higher antifungal activity than those from the wild-type. Chromatographic and spectroscopic analyses revealed that tri5 overexpression led to an increased production of trichodermin and tyrosol. Agar diffusion assays with these two purified metabolites from the tri5-overexpressing transformant T. brevicompactum Tb41tri5 showed that only trichodermin had antifungal activity against Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Kluyveromyces marxianus, Candida albicans, Candida glabrata, Candida tropicalis and Aspergillus fumigatus, in most cases such activity being higher than that observed for amphotericin B and hygromycin. Our results point to the significant role of tri5 in the production of trichodermin and in the antifungal activity of T. brevicompactum.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2012

A New Approach to Drug Discovery High-Throughput Screening of Microbial Natural Extracts against Aspergillus fumigatus Using Resazurin

Maria Cândida Monteiro; Mercedes de la Cruz; Juan Cantizani; Catalina Moreno; José R. Tormo; Emilia Mellado; J. Ramón De Lucas; Francisco Asensio; Vito Valiante; Axel A. Brakhage; Jean-Paul Latgé; Olga Genilloud; Francisca Vicente

Natural products are an inexhaustible source for drug discovery. However, the validation and selection of primary screening assays are vital to guarantee a selection of extracts or molecules with relevant pharmacological action and worthy of following up. The assay must be rapid, simple, easy to implement, and produce quick results and preferably at a low cost. In this work, we developed and validated a colorimetric microtiter assay using the resazurin viability dye. The parameters of the resazurin method for high-throughput screening (HTS) using natural extracts against Aspergillus fumigatus were optimized and set up. The extracts plus RPMI-1640 modified medium containing the spores and 0.002% resazurin were added per well. The fluorescence was read after 24 to 30 h of incubation. The resazurin proved to be as suitable as Alamar Blue for determining the minimal inhibitory concentration of different antifungals against A. fumigatus and effective to analyze fungicidal and fungistatic compounds. An HTS of 12 000 microbial extracts was carried out against two A. fumigatus strains, and 2.7% of the extracts displayed antifungal activity. Our group has been the first to use this methodology for screening a collection of natural extracts to identify compounds with antifungal activity against the medically important human pathogen A. fumigatus.

Collaboration


Dive into the Francisca Vicente's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gerald F. Bills

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge