A Chemical Proteomic Strategy Reveals Inhibitors of Lipoate Salvage in Bacteria and Parasites

Author:

Dienemann Jan‐Niklas1ORCID,Chen Shu‐Yu1,Hitzenberger Manuel1,Sievert Montana L.2ORCID,Hacker Stephan M.3ORCID,Prigge Sean T.2ORCID,Zacharias Martin1ORCID,Groll Michael1ORCID,Sieber Stephan A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Technical University of Munich TUM School of Natural Sciences Department of Bioscience Center for Functional Protein Assemblies (CPA) Ernst-Otto-Fischer Strasse 8 85748 Garching bei München Germany

2. Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 615N. Wolfe Street, E5132 MD 21205 Baltimore USA

3. Leiden Institute of Chemistry Leiden University Einsteinweg 55 2333CC Leiden The Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractThe development of novel anti‐infectives requires unprecedented strategies targeting pathways which are solely present in pathogens but absent in humans. Following this principle, we developed inhibitors of lipoic acid (LA) salvage, a crucial pathway for the survival of LA auxotrophic bacteria and parasites but non‐essential in human cells. An LA‐based probe was selectively transferred onto substrate proteins via lipoate protein ligase (LPL) in intact cells, and their binding sites were determined by mass spectrometry. Probe labeling served as a proxy of LPL activity, enabling in situ screenings for cell‐permeable LPL inhibitors. Profiling a focused compound library revealed two substrate analogs (LAMe and C3) as inhibitors, which were further validated by binding studies and co‐crystallography. Importantly, LAMe exhibited low toxicity in human cells and achieved killing of Plasmodium falciparum in erythrocytes with an EC50 value of 15 μM, making it the most effective LPL inhibitor reported to date.

Funder

HORIZON EUROPE European Research Council

Merck KGaA

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Chemistry,Catalysis

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