| Literature DB >> 31835707 |
Jickky Palmae Sarathy1, Gerhard Gruber2, Thomas Dick3,4,5.
Abstract
Bedaquiline (BDQ) inhibits ATP generation in Mycobacterium tuberculosis by interfering with the F-ATP synthase activity. Two mechanisms of action of BDQ are broadly accepted. A direct mechanism involves BDQ binding to the enzyme's c-ring to block its rotation, thus inhibiting ATP synthesis in the enzyme's catalytic α3β3-headpiece. An indirect mechanism involves BDQ uncoupling electron transport in the electron transport chain from ATP synthesis at the F-ATP synthase. In a recently uncovered second direct mechanism, BDQ binds to the enzyme's ε-subunit to disrupt its ability to link c-ring rotation to ATP synthesis at the α3β3-headpiece. However, this mechanism is controversial as the drug's binding affinity for the isolated ε-subunit protein is moderate and spontaneous resistance mutants in the ε-subunit cannot be isolated. Recently, the new, structurally distinct BDQ analogue TBAJ-876 was utilized as a chemical probe to revisit BDQ's mechanisms of action. In this review, we first summarize discoveries on BDQ's mechanisms of action and then describe the new insights derived from the studies of TBAJ-876. The TBAJ-876 investigations confirm the c-ring as a target, while also supporting a functional role for targeting the ε-subunit. Surprisingly, the new findings suggest that the uncoupler mechanism does not play a key role in BDQ's anti-mycobacterial activity.Entities:
Keywords: Bedaquiline; F-ATP synthase; TBAJ-876; c-subunit; diarylquinoline; tuberculosis; uncoupler; ε-subunit
Year: 2019 PMID: 31835707 PMCID: PMC6963887 DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics8040261
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antibiotics (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6382
Figure 1Structures of Bedaquiline (BDQ) and TBAJ-876. BDQ’s quinoline (1), dimethylamino (4), and hydroxyl (5) moieties are retained in TBAJ-876. However, the parental drug’s phenyl (2) and naphthalene (3) moieties are replaced by the 2,3,5-trialkoxypyridin-4-yl and 3,5-dialkoxypyridin-4-yl moieties, respectively.
Figure 2Mechanisms of action of BDQ. Shown is a schematic representation of the mycobacterial F-ATP synthase and the three proposed mechanisms (1, 2, 3) of how BDQ interferes with the activity of this enzyme complex. During ATP synthesis, the proton motive force drives rotation of the c-ring (c9) via the flow of protons down the transmembrane pH gradient through the interface between the a-subunit and c-ring. This rotation is transmitted by the γ- and ε-subunits to the α3β3-headpiece where it drives ATP synthesis. An indirect mechanism of action of BDQ involves the drug functioning as a H+/K+ anti-porter from the vicinity of its c-ring binding site (1), thereby collapsing the transmembrane pH gradient component of the proton motive force which is required to drive c-ring rotation. This causes the uncoupling of electron transport in the electron transport chain (ETC) from ATP synthesis at the F-ATP synthase. The direct mechanisms of action of BDQ involve targeting the c-ring (2) and the ε-subunit (3) of the enzyme. Binding to a c-subunit stalls rotation of the c-ring and thus inhibits ATP synthesis in the catalytic α3β3-headpiece. Binding to the ε-subunit disrupts its intra-subunit amino acid interaction network. This prevents the transmission of information on c-ring rotation throughout the subunit (represented by the black arrow) and to the α3β3-headpiece through the extended form of its C-terminus (represented by the blue arrow). Comparative analyses of the new BDQ analogue TBAJ-876 with the parental drug showed that new compound retained targeting of both the c-ring (2) and ε-subunit (3), suggesting that both mechanisms are required for effective enzyme inhibition. However, TBAJ-876 was uncovered to have lost BDQ’s uncoupler property (1). These findings suggest that targeting both the c-ring and ε-subunit of the mycobacterial F-ATP synthase is required for BDQ’s anti-mycobacterial activity, while its uncoupler property is not.