Literature DB >> 33512995

Unconventional Antibacterials and Adjuvants.

Mayland Chang1, Kiran V Mahasenan1, Juan A Hermoso2, Shahriar Mobashery1.   

Abstract

The need for new classes of antibacterials is genuine in light of the dearth of clinical options for the treatment of bacterial infections. The prodigious discoveries of antibiotics during the 1940s to 1970s, a period wistfully referred to as the Golden Age of Antibiotics, have not kept up in the face of emergence of resistant bacteria in the past few decades. There has been a renewed interest in old drugs, the repurposing of the existing antibiotics and pairing of synergistic antibiotics or of an antibiotic with an adjuvant. Notwithstanding, discoveries of novel classes of these life-saving drugs have become increasingly difficult, calling for new paradigms. We describe, herein, three strategies from our laboratories toward discoveries of new antibacterials and adjuvants using computational and multidisciplinary experimental methods. One approach targets penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs), biosynthetic enzymes of cell-wall peptidoglycan, for discoveries of non-β-lactam inhibitors. Oxadiazoles and quinazolinones emerged as two structural classes out of these efforts. Several hundred analogs of these two classes of antibiotics have been synthesized and fully characterized in our laboratories. A second approach ventures into inhibition of allosteric regulation of cell-wall biosynthesis. The mechanistic details of allosteric regulation of PBP2a of Staphylococcus aureus, discovered in our laboratories, is outlined. The allosteric site in this protein is at 60 Å distance to the active site, whereby ligand binding at the former makes access to the latter by the substrate possible. We have documented that both quinazolinones and ceftaroline, a fifth-generation cephalosporin, bind to the allosteric site in manifestation of the antibacterial activity. Attempts at inhibition of the regulatory phosphorylation events identified three classes of antibacterial adjuvants and one class of antibacterials, the picolinamides. The chemical structures for these hits went through diversification by synthesis of hundreds of analogs. These analogs were characterized in various assays for identification of leads with adjuvant and antibacterial activities. Furthermore, we revisited the mechanism of bulgecins, a class of adjuvants discovered and abandoned in the 1980s. These compounds potentiate the activities of β-lactam antibiotics by the formation of bulges at the sites of septum formation during bacterial replication, which are points of structural weakness in the envelope. These bulges experience rupture, which leads to bacterial death. Bulgecin A inhibits the lytic transglycosylase Slt of Pseudomonas aeruginosa as a likely transition-state mimetic for its turnover of the cell-wall peptidoglycan. Once damage to cell wall is inflicted by a β-lactam antibiotic, the function of Slt is to repair the damage. When Slt is inhibited by bulgecin A, the organism cannot cope with it and would undergo rapid lysis. Bulgecin A is an effective adjuvant of β-lactam antibiotics. These discoveries of small-molecule classes of antibacterials or of adjuvants to antibacterials hold promise in strategies for treatment of bacterial infections.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 33512995      PMCID: PMC8176569          DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.0c00776

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acc Chem Res        ISSN: 0001-4842            Impact factor:   22.384


  82 in total

1.  Analysis of the clinical antibacterial and antituberculosis pipeline.

Authors:  Ursula Theuretzbacher; Simon Gottwalt; Peter Beyer; Mark Butler; Lloyd Czaplewski; Christian Lienhardt; Lorenzo Moja; Mical Paul; Sarah Paulin; John H Rex; Lynn L Silver; Melvin Spigelman; Guy E Thwaites; Jean-Pierre Paccaud; Stephan Harbarth
Journal:  Lancet Infect Dis       Date:  2018-10-15       Impact factor: 25.071

Review 2.  4(3H)-Quinazolinone derivatives: Promising antibacterial drug leads.

Authors:  Srikanth Gatadi; T Vasanta Lakshmi; Srinivas Nanduri
Journal:  Eur J Med Chem       Date:  2019-03-11       Impact factor: 6.514

Review 3.  Penicillin binding protein 2a: An overview and a medicinal chemistry perspective.

Authors:  Menna-Allah W Shalaby; Eman M E Dokla; Rabah A T Serya; Khaled A M Abouzid
Journal:  Eur J Med Chem       Date:  2020-04-18       Impact factor: 6.514

4.  The Tipper-Strominger Hypothesis and Triggering of Allostery in Penicillin-Binding Protein 2a of Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA).

Authors:  Jennifer Fishovitz; Negin Taghizadeh; Jed F Fisher; Mayland Chang; Shahriar Mobashery
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2015-05-18       Impact factor: 15.419

5.  The Challenge of Overcoming Antibiotic Resistance: An Adjuvant Approach?

Authors:  Roberta J Melander; Christian Melander
Journal:  ACS Infect Dis       Date:  2017-05-26       Impact factor: 5.084

6.  Synthesis, biological evaluation and structure-activity relationship of 2-styrylquinazolones as anti-tubercular agents.

Authors:  Pradeep S Jadhavar; Tejas M Dhameliya; Maulikkumar D Vaja; Dinesh Kumar; Jonnalagadda Padma Sridevi; Perumal Yogeeswari; Dharmarajan Sriram; Asit K Chakraborti
Journal:  Bioorg Med Chem Lett       Date:  2016-04-07       Impact factor: 2.823

7.  Essramycin: a first triazolopyrimidine antibiotic isolated from nature.

Authors:  Mervat M A El-Gendy; Mohamed Shaaban; Khaled A Shaaban; Ahmed M El-Bondkly; Hartmut Laatsch
Journal:  J Antibiot (Tokyo)       Date:  2008-03       Impact factor: 2.649

8.  Structure-Activity Relationship for the Oxadiazole Class of Antibacterials.

Authors:  Marc A Boudreau; Derong Ding; Jayda E Meisel; Jeshina Janardhanan; Edward Spink; Zhihong Peng; Yuanyuan Qian; Takao Yamaguchi; Sebastian A Testero; Peter I O'Daniel; Erika Leemans; Elena Lastochkin; Wei Song; Valerie A Schroeder; William R Wolter; Mark A Suckow; Shahriar Mobashery; Mayland Chang
Journal:  ACS Med Chem Lett       Date:  2019-10-03       Impact factor: 4.345

9.  Chemical Space Exploration around Thieno[3,2-d]pyrimidin-4(3H)-one Scaffold Led to a Novel Class of Highly Active Clostridium difficile Inhibitors.

Authors:  Xuwei Shao; Ahmed AbdelKhalek; Nader S Abutaleb; Uday Kiran Velagapudi; Sabesan Yoganathan; Mohamed N Seleem; Tanaji T Talele
Journal:  J Med Chem       Date:  2019-10-21       Impact factor: 7.446

10.  Optimized arylomycins are a new class of Gram-negative antibiotics.

Authors:  Peter A Smith; Michael F T Koehler; Hany S Girgis; Donghong Yan; Yongsheng Chen; Yuan Chen; James J Crawford; Matthew R Durk; Robert I Higuchi; Jing Kang; Jeremy Murray; Prasuna Paraselli; Summer Park; Wilson Phung; John G Quinn; Tucker C Roberts; Lionel Rougé; Jacob B Schwarz; Elizabeth Skippington; John Wai; Min Xu; Zhiyong Yu; Hua Zhang; Man-Wah Tan; Christopher E Heise
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2018-09-12       Impact factor: 49.962

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