| Literature DB >> 30682246 |
Wenhe Zhong1,2, Ann Koay3, Anna Ngo3, Yan Li3, Qianhui Nah1, Yee Hwa Wong2,4, Yok Hian Chionh1, Hui Qi Ng3, Xiaoying Koh-Stenta3, Anders Poulsen3, Klement Foo3, Megan McBee1, Meng Ling Choong3, Abbas El Sahili2,4, Congbao Kang3, Alex Matter3, Julien Lescar1,2,4, Jeffrey Hill3, Peter Dedon1,5.
Abstract
Bacterial tRNA modification synthesis pathways are critical to cell survival under stress and thus represent ideal mechanism-based targets for antibiotic development. One such target is the tRNA-(N1G37) methyltransferase (TrmD), which is conserved and essential in many bacterial pathogens. Here we developed and applied a widely applicable, radioactivity-free, bioluminescence-based high-throughput screen (HTS) against 116350 compounds from structurally diverse small-molecule libraries to identify inhibitors of Pseudomonas aeruginosa TrmD ( PaTrmD). Of 285 compounds passing primary and secondary screens, a total of 61 TrmD inhibitors comprised of more than 12 different chemical scaffolds were identified, all showing submicromolar to low micromolar enzyme inhibitor constants, with binding affinity confirmed by thermal stability and surface plasmon resonance. S-Adenosyl-l-methionine (SAM) competition assays suggested that compounds in the pyridine-pyrazole-piperidine scaffold were substrate SAM-competitive inhibitors. This was confirmed in structural studies, with nuclear magnetic resonance analysis and crystal structures of PaTrmD showing pyridine-pyrazole-piperidine compounds bound in the SAM-binding pocket. Five hits showed cellular activities against Gram-positive bacteria, including mycobacteria, while one compound, a SAM-noncompetitive inhibitor, exhibited broad-spectrum antibacterial activity. The results of this HTS expand the repertoire of TrmD-inhibiting molecular scaffolds that show promise for antibiotic development.Entities:
Keywords: anti-infective development; antibacterial drug screening; high-throughput screening; tRNA modification
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30682246 DOI: 10.1021/acsinfecdis.8b00275
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Infect Dis ISSN: 2373-8227 Impact factor: 5.084