TB Research

Rationally Designed Novel Phenyloxazoline Synthase Inhibitors: Chemical Synthesis and Biological Evaluation to Accelerate the Discovery of New Antimycobacterial Antibiotics

Mousumi Shyam, Gourab Bhattacharje, Chris Daniel, Amrendra Kumar, Pragya D. Yadav, P. Mukherjee, Samsher Singh, Amit Kumar Das, et al. (12 authors)

Molecules · 2023-12

Abstract

The uncontrolled spread of drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB) clinical cases necessitates the urgent discovery of newer chemotypes with novel mechanisms of action. Here, we report the chemical synthesis of rationally designed novel transition-state analogues (TSAs) by targeting the cyclization (Cy) domain of phenyloxazoline synthase (MbtB), a key enzyme of the conditionally essential siderophore biosynthesis pathway. Following bio-assay-guided evaluation of TSA analogues preferentially in iron-deprived and iron-rich media to understand target preferentiality against a panel of pathogenic and non-pathogenic mycobacteria strains, we identified a hit, i.e., TSA-5. Molecular docking, dynamics, and MMPBSA calculations enabled us to comprehend TSA-5’s stable binding at the active site pocket of MbtB_Cy and the results imply that the MbtB_Cy binding pocket has a strong affinity for electron-withdrawing functional groups and contributes to stable polar interactions between enzyme and ligand. Furthermore, enhanced intracellular killing efficacy (8 μg/mL) of TSA-5 against Mycobacterium aurum in infected macrophages is noted in comparison to moderate in vitro antimycobacterial efficacy (64 μg/mL) against M. aurum. TSA-5 also demonstrates whole-cell efflux pump inhibitory activity against Mycobacterium smegmatis. Identification of TSA-5 by focusing on the modular MbtB_Cy domain paves the way for accelerating novel anti-TB antibiotic discoveries.

MeSH terms

  • Antimycobacterial
  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • Drug discovery
  • Mycobacterium smegmatis
  • Docking (animal)
  • Enzyme
  • Chemistry
  • Mycobacterium
  • Antibiotics
  • Microbiology
  • Biology
  • Biochemistry
  • Computational biology
  • Tuberculosis