Small Molecule Targeting PPM1A Activates Autophagy for <i>Mycobacterium tuberculosis</i> Host-Directed Therapy
Zhipeng Yu, Yi Chu Liang, Stefania Berton, Liping Liu, Jiaqi Zou, Lu Chen, Zhongliang Xu, Cheng Luo, et al. (10 authors)
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry · 2024-07
Abstract
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), the infectious agent of tuberculosis (TB), causes over 1.5 million deaths globally every year. Host-directed therapies (HDT) for TB are desirable for their potential to shorten treatment and reduce the development of antibiotic resistance. Previously, we described a modular biomimetic strategy to identify SMIP-30, targeting PPM1A (IC50 = 1.19 μM), a metal-dependent phosphatase exploited by Mtb to survive intracellularly. SMIP-30 restricted the survival of Mtb in macrophages and lungs of infected mice. Herein, we redesigned SMIP-30 to create SMIP-031, which is a more potent inhibitor for PPM1A (IC50 = 180 nM). SMIP-031 efficiently increased the level of phosphorylation of S403-p62 and the expression of LC3B-II to activate autophagy, resulting in the dose-dependent clearance of Mtb in infected macrophages. SMIP-031 possesses a good pharmacokinetic profile and oral bioavailability (F = 74%). In vivo, SMIP-031 is well tolerated up to 50 mg/kg and significantly reduces the bacteria burden in the spleens of infected mice.
MeSH terms
- Chemistry
- Autophagy
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Tuberculosis
- Host (biology)
- Small molecule
- Biochemistry