Author:
Zoraghi Roya,See Raymond H.,Axerio-Cilies Peter,Kumar Nag S.,Gong Huansheng,Moreau Anne,Hsing Michael,Kaur Sukhbir,Swayze Richard D.,Worrall Liam,Amandoron Emily,Lian Tian,Jackson Linda,Jiang Jihong,Thorson Lisa,Labriere Christophe,Foster Leonard,Brunham Robert C.,McMaster William R.,Finlay B. Brett,Strynadka Natalie C.,Cherkasov Artem,Young Robert N.,Reiner Neil E.
Abstract
ABSTRACTNovel classes of antimicrobials are needed to address the challenge of multidrug-resistant bacteria such as methicillin-resistantStaphylococcus aureus(MRSA). Using the architecture of the MRSA interactome, we identified pyruvate kinase (PK) as a potential novel drug target based upon it being a highly connected, essential hub in the MRSA interactome. Structural modeling, including X-ray crystallography, revealed discrete features of PK in MRSA, which appeared suitable for the selective targeting of the bacterial enzyme.In silicolibrary screening combined with functional enzymatic assays identified an acyl hydrazone-based compound (IS-130) as a potent MRSA PK inhibitor (50% inhibitory concentration [IC50] of 0.1 μM) with >1,000-fold selectivity over human PK isoforms. Medicinal chemistry around the IS-130 scaffold identified analogs that more potently and selectively inhibited MRSA PK enzymatic activity andS. aureusgrowthin vitro(MIC of 1 to 5 μg/ml). These novel anti-PK compounds were found to possess antistaphylococcal activity, including both MRSA and multidrug-resistantS. aureus(MDRSA) strains. These compounds also exhibited exceptional antibacterial activities against other Gram-positive genera, including enterococci and streptococci. PK lead compounds were found to be noncompetitive inhibitors and were bactericidal. In addition, mutants with significant increases in MICs were not isolated after 25 bacterial passages in culture, indicating that resistance may be slow to emerge. These findings validate the principles of network science as a powerful approach to identify novel antibacterial drug targets. They also provide a proof of principle, based upon PK in MRSA, for a research platform aimed at discovering and optimizing selective inhibitors of novel bacterial targets where human orthologs exist, as leads for anti-infective drug development.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
Cited by
45 articles.
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