Ifeanyichukwu E Eke, John T Williams, Robert B Abramovitch
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
High-throughput screening (HTS) of small molecules is a starting point for many drug development pipelines, including tuberculosis. These screens often result in multiple hits whose mechanisms of action remain unknown. From our initial HTS of the Molecular Libraries Small Molecule Repository (MLSMR), we cherry-picked 935 compounds that inhibited the growth of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and set out to provide an early assessment of their antimycobacterial properties and mechanism of action. To characterize the MLSMR Mtb growth inhibitors, a combination of cheminformatics and targeted mutant screening against mutants in katG, hadAB, and a mixed pool of mmpL3 mutants was used to characterize the hits. As a validation of this approach, we identified 101 isoniazid analogs that predictably lose all their antimycobacterial activities against the katG mutant. Interestingly, eight isoniazid analogs retain part of their activity against the mutant, suggesting an alternative KatG-independent mechanism. This approach also identified new compounds belonging to already known scaffolds that target HadAB or MmpL3. Additionally, we explored the nitro-containing compounds in our data set and discovered nitrofuranyl benzothiazoles that show enhanced activity against the mmpL3 and katG mutants, a phenomenon known as collateral sensitivity. Overall, this study will serve as an important resource for further follow-up studies of antitubercular small molecules in the MLSMR library and provide a well-characterized training set for artificial intelligence-driven antimycobacterial drug discovery.
期刊介绍:
ACS Infectious Diseases will be the first journal to highlight chemistry and its role in this multidisciplinary and collaborative research area. The journal will cover a diverse array of topics including, but not limited to:
* Discovery and development of new antimicrobial agents — identified through target- or phenotypic-based approaches as well as compounds that induce synergy with antimicrobials.
* Characterization and validation of drug target or pathways — use of single target and genome-wide knockdown and knockouts, biochemical studies, structural biology, new technologies to facilitate characterization and prioritization of potential drug targets.
* Mechanism of drug resistance — fundamental research that advances our understanding of resistance; strategies to prevent resistance.
* Mechanisms of action — use of genetic, metabolomic, and activity- and affinity-based protein profiling to elucidate the mechanism of action of clinical and experimental antimicrobial agents.
* Host-pathogen interactions — tools for studying host-pathogen interactions, cellular biochemistry of hosts and pathogens, and molecular interactions of pathogens with host microbiota.
* Small molecule vaccine adjuvants for infectious disease.
* Viral and bacterial biochemistry and molecular biology.