TB Research

Design, Synthesis, and Biological Evaluation of Pyrrole-2-carboxamide Derivatives as Mycobacterial Membrane Protein Large 3 Inhibitors for Treating Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis

Hongyi Zhao, Yongxin Gao, Wei Li, Sheng Li, Keli Cui, Bin Wang, Lei Fu, Meng Gao, et al. (14 authors)

Journal of Medicinal Chemistry · 2022-08

Abstract

In this work, pyrrole-2-carboxamides were designed with a structure-guided strategy based on the crystal structure of MmpL3 and a pharmacophore model. The structure–activity relationship studies revealed that attaching phenyl and pyridyl groups with electron-withdrawing substituents to the pyrrole ring and attaching bulky substituents to the carboxamide greatly improved anti-TB activity. Most compounds showed potent anti-TB activity (MIC < 0.016 μg/mL) and low cytotoxicity (IC50 > 64 μg/mL). Compound 32 displayed excellent activity against drug-resistant tuberculosis, good microsomal stability, almost no inhibition of the hERG K+ channel, and good in vivo efficacy. Furthermore, the target of the pyrrole-2-carboxamides was identified by measuring their potency against M. smegmatis expressing wild-type and mutated variants of the mmpL3 gene from M. tuberculosis (mmpL3tb) and determining their effect on mycolic acid biosynthesis using a [14C] acetate metabolic labeling assay. The present study provides new MmpL3 inhibitors that are promising anti-TB agents.

MeSH terms

  • Chemistry
  • Pharmacophore
  • Carboxamide
  • hERG
  • Pyrrole
  • Stereochemistry
  • Mycobacterium smegmatis
  • Mycolic acid
  • Structure–activity relationship
  • Cytotoxicity
  • Lead compound
  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • In vitro
  • Biochemistry