Avoiding Antibiotic Inactivation in Mycobacterium tuberculosis by Rv3406 through Strategic Nucleoside Modification
Bockman MR, Engelhart CA, Dawadi S, Larson P, Tiwari D, Ferguson DM, Schnappinger D, Aldrich CC
ACS infectious diseases · 2018-04
Abstract
5'-[ N-(d-biotinoyl)sulfamoyl]amino-5'-deoxyadenosine (Bio-AMS, 1) possesses selective activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis ( Mtb) and arrests fatty acid and lipid biosynthesis through inhibition of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis biotin protein ligase ( MtBPL). Mtb develops spontaneous resistance to 1 with a frequency of at least 1 × 10 -7 by overexpression of Rv3406, a type II sulfatase that enzymatically inactivates 1. In an effort to circumvent this resistance mechanism, we describe herein strategic modification of the nucleoside at the 5'-position to prevent enzymatic inactivation. The new analogues retained subnanomolar potency to MtBPL ( K D = 0.66-0.97 nM), and 5' R- C-methyl derivative 6 exhibited identical antimycobacterial activity toward: Mtb H37Rv, MtBPL overexpression, and an isogenic Rv3406 overexpression strain (minimum inhibitory concentration, MIC = 1.56 μM). Moreover, 6 was not metabolized by recombinant Rv3406 and resistant mutants to 6 could not be isolated (frequency of resistance -10 ) demonstrating it successfully overcame Rv3406-mediated resistance.
MeSH terms
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Carbon-Nitrogen Ligases
- Nucleosides
- Antitubercular Agents
- Microbial Sensitivity Tests
- Drug Resistance, Bacterial
- Molecular Structure
- Structure-Activity Relationship
- Substrate Specificity