| Literature DB >> 22908966 |
Thomas A Keating1, Joseph V Newman, Nelson B Olivier, Linda G Otterson, Beth Andrews, P Ann Boriack-Sjodin, John N Breen, Peter Doig, Jacques Dumas, Eric Gangl, Oluyinka M Green, Satenig Y Guler, Martin F Hentemann, Diane Joseph-McCarthy, Sameer Kawatkar, Amy Kutschke, James T Loch, Andrew R McKenzie, Selvi Pradeepan, Swati Prasad, Gabriel Martínez-Botella.
Abstract
There is an urgent need for new antibacterials that pinpoint novel targets and thereby avoid existing resistance mechanisms. We have created novel synthetic antibacterials through structure-based drug design that specifically target bacterial thymidylate kinase (TMK), a nucleotide kinase essential in the DNA synthesis pathway. A high-resolution structure shows compound TK-666 binding partly in the thymidine monophosphate substrate site, but also forming new induced-fit interactions that give picomolar affinity. TK-666 has potent, broad-spectrum Gram-positive microbiological activity (including activity against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus and vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus), bactericidal action with rapid killing kinetics, excellent target selectivity over the human ortholog, and low resistance rates. We demonstrate in vivo efficacy against S. aureus in a murine infected-thigh model. This work presents the first validation of TMK as a compelling antibacterial target and provides a rationale for pursuing novel clinical candidates for treating Gram-positive infections through TMK.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22908966 DOI: 10.1021/cb300316n
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Chem Biol ISSN: 1554-8929 Impact factor: 5.100