Revisiting the β-Lactams for Tuberculosis Therapy with a Compound-Compound Synthetic Lethality Approach
Xiao S, Guo H, Weiner WS, Maddox C, Mao C, Gunosewoyo H, Pelly S, White EL, et al. (13 authors)
Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy · 2019-10
Abstract
The suboptimal effectiveness of β-lactam antibiotics against Mycobacterium tuberculosis has hindered the utility of this compound class for tuberculosis treatment. However, the results of treatment with a second-line regimen containing meropenem plus a β-lactamase inhibitor were found to be encouraging in a case study of extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (M. C. Payen, S. De Wit, C. Martin, R. Sergysels, et al., Int J Tuberc Lung Dis 16:558-560, 2012, https://doi.org/10.5588/ijtld.11.0414). We hypothesized that the innate resistance of M. tuberculosis to β-lactams is mediated in part by noncanonical accessory proteins that are not considered the classic targets of β-lactams and that small-molecule inhibitors of those accessory targets might sensitize M. tuberculosis to β-lactams. In this study, we screened an NIH small-molecule library for the ability to sensitize M. tuberculosis to meropenem. We identified six hit compounds, belonging to either the N -arylindole or benzothiophene chemotype. Verification studies confirmed the synthetic lethality phenotype for three of the N -arylindoles and one benzothiophene derivative. The latter was demonstrated to be partially bioavailable via oral administration in mice. Structure-activity relationship studies of both structural classes identified analogs with potent antitubercular activity, alone or in combination with meropenem. Transcriptional profiling revealed that oxidoreductases, MmpL family proteins, and a 27-kDa benzoquinone methyltransferase could be the targets of the N -arylindole potentiator. In conclusion, our compound-compound synthetic lethality screening revealed novel small molecules that were capable of potentiating the action of meropenem, presumably via inhibition of the innate resistance conferred by β-lactam accessory proteins. β-Lactam compound-compound synthetic lethality may be an alternative approach for drug-resistant tuberculosis.
MeSH terms
- Animals
- Mice, Inbred BALB C
- Mice
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant
- beta-Lactams
- beta-Lactamases
- Anti-Bacterial Agents
- Antitubercular Agents
- Microbial Sensitivity Tests
- Female
- Extensively Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis
- beta-Lactamase Inhibitors
- Synthetic Lethal Mutations
- Meropenem