TB Research

Thiadiazole-azetidinone sulfonamide hybrids with antimycobacterial activity supported by structure-based analysis.

Subham Kumar Vishwakarma, Achal Mishra, Naresh Panigrahi, Cesar Augusto Roque-Borda

RSC advances · 2026-03

Abstract

Tuberculosis (TB), caused by, remains a major global health challenge, exacerbated by the rapid emergence of drug-resistant strains. In this study, a series of thiadiazole-azetidinone hybrid molecules was designed and synthesized by integrating two pharmacophores with known relevance in antimycobacterial drug discovery. The hybrid framework was conceived to explore the structural compatibility of thiadiazole-2-sulfonamide and azetidinone motifs within a single molecular architecture targeting two essential mycobacterial enzymes, decaprenylphosphoryl-β-d-ribose 2'-oxidase (DprE1) and dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR), involved in cell wall biosynthesis and folate metabolism, respectively. The synthesized compounds displayedantimycobacterial activity againstH37Rv and were further analyzed through molecular docking and molecular dynamics simulations (200 ns) to rationalize their interactions with both targets under dynamic conditions. These computational studies provided mechanistic insights into the binding modes, stability, and key interactions governing enzyme recognition within this hybrid series.ADMET analysis indicated acceptable drug-like profiles across the scaffold. Rather than defining a clinically optimized candidate, this work establishes a structure-activity and structure-interaction framework that supports the thiadiazole-azetidinone hybrid concept and guides future chemical optimization toward antitubercular agents.