trans-Translation inhibitors that kill Mycobacterium tuberculosis and pathogenic non-tuberculous mycobacteria also disrupt metal homeostasis
Akanksha Varshney, Ziyi Jia, Gebremichal Gebretsadik, Narendran G-Dayanandan, Terry L. Bowlin, Michelle M. Butler, Anthony D. Baughn, Kenneth C. Keiler
Microbiology · 2026-05
Abstract
Mycobacterium tuberculosis and pathogenic nontuberculous mycobacteria pose a growing challenge to human health, and new antibiotics that target new pathways with novel mechanisms of action are urgently needed. Acylaminooxadiazole derivatives have previously been shown to inhibit the trans- translation ribosome rescue pathway and kill M. tuberculosis . Here, we show that modifications to the acylaminooxadiazole scaffold can improve potency and tune mycobacterial species specificity, resulting in molecules that kill Mycobacterium avium , Mycobacterium abscessus and M. tuberculosis clinical isolates. Free iron was previously shown to antagonize antibacterial activity and decrease the inhibition of trans -translation by acylaminooxadiazoles, but we found that biologically relevant iron sources such as haemin and transferrin do not affect activity. Depletion of transfer-messenger RNA resulted in potentiation of acylaminooxadiazole-based trans -translation inhibitors, confirming inhibition of trans -translation as a mechanism of action. Acylaminooxadiazoles disrupted metal homeostasis in M. tuberculosis , and mutants defective in siderophore-mediated iron utilization were hypersusceptible to some acylaminooxadiazole derivatives, suggesting that these compounds may have a dual mechanism for killing mycobacteria.
MeSH terms
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Microbiology
- Tuberculosis
- Mycobacterium
- Antibiotics
- Biology
- Iron homeostasis
- Mechanism of action
- Pathogenic bacteria
- Bacteria
- Mutant
- Transferrin
- Nontuberculous mycobacteria
- Antibacterial agent
- Chemistry
- Siderophore
- Translation (biology)
- Mycobacterium bovis
- Mycobacterium abscessus
- Cytosol
- Homeostasis