Investigation of ( S)-(-)-Acidomycin: A Selective Antimycobacterial Natural Product That Inhibits Biotin Synthase
Bockman MR, Engelhart CA, Cramer JD, Howe MD, Mishra NK, Zimmerman M, Larson P, Alvarez-Cabrera N, et al. (17 authors)
ACS infectious diseases · 2019-02
Abstract
The synthesis, absolute stereochemical configuration, complete biological characterization, mechanism of action and resistance, and pharmacokinetic properties of ( S)-(-)-acidomycin are described. Acidomycin possesses promising antitubercular activity against a series of contemporary drug susceptible and drug-resistant M. tuberculosis strains (minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) = 0.096-6.2 μM) but is inactive against nontuberculosis mycobacteria and Gram-positive and Gram-negative pathogens (MICs > 1000 μM). Complementation studies with biotin biosynthetic pathway intermediates and subsequent biochemical studies confirmed acidomycin inhibits biotin synthesis with a K i of approximately 1 μM through the competitive inhibition of biotin synthase (BioB) and also stimulates unproductive cleavage of S-adenosyl-l-methionine (SAM) to generate the toxic metabolite 5'-deoxyadenosine. Cell studies demonstrate acidomycin selectively accumulates in M. tuberculosis providing a mechanistic basis for the observed antibacterial activity. The development of spontaneous resistance by M. tuberculosis to acidomycin was difficult, and only low-level resistance to acidomycin was observed by overexpression of BioB. Collectively, the results provide a foundation to advance acidomycin and highlight BioB as a promising target.
MeSH terms
- Animals
- Humans
- Mice
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Tuberculosis
- Caproates
- Biotin
- Sulfurtransferases
- Bacterial Proteins
- Biological Products
- Antitubercular Agents
- Microbial Sensitivity Tests
- Drug Resistance, Bacterial
- Kinetics
- Thiazolidines