From bacterial genomes to novel antibacterial agents: discovery, characterization, and antibacterial activity of compounds that bind to HI0065 (YjeE) from Haemophilus influenzae |
| |
Authors: | Lerner Claude G Hajduk Philip J Wagner Rolf Wagenaar Frank L Woodall Charlotte Gu Yu-Gui Searle Xenia B Florjancic Alan S Zhang Tianyuan Clark Richard F Cooper Curt S Mack Jamey C Yu Liping Cai Mengli Betz Steven F Chovan Linda E McCall J Owen Black-Schaefer Candace L Kakavas Stephan J Schurdak Mark E Comess Kenneth M Walter Karl A Edalji Rohinton Dorwin Sarah A Smith Richard A Hebert Eric J Harlan John E Metzger Randy E Merta Philip J Baranowski John L Coen Michael L Thornewell Susan J Shivakumar Annapur G Saiki Anne Y Soni Niru Bui Mai Balli Darlene J Sanders William J Nilius Angela M |
| |
Affiliation: | Abbott Global Pharmaceutical Research and Development, Abbott Park, IL 60064-6098, USA. |
| |
Abstract: | As part of a fully integrated and comprehensive strategy to discover novel antibacterial agents, NMR- and mass spectrometry-based affinity selection screens were performed to identify compounds that bind to protein targets uniquely found in bacteria and encoded by genes essential for microbial viability. A biphenyl acid lead series emerged from an NMR-based screen with the Haemophilus influenzae protein HI0065, a member of a family of probable ATP-binding proteins found exclusively in eubacteria. The structure-activity relationships developed around the NMR-derived biphenyl acid lead were consistent with on-target antibacterial activity as the Staphylococcus aureus antibacterial activity of the series correlated extremely well with binding affinity to HI0065, while the correlation of binding affinity with B-cell cytotoxicity was relatively poor. Although further studies are needed to conclusively establish the mode of action of the biphenyl series, these compounds represent novel leads that can serve as the basis for the development of novel antibacterial agents that appear to work via an unprecedented mechanism of action. Overall, these results support the genomics-driven hypothesis that targeting bacterial essential gene products that are not present in eukaryotic cells can identify novel antibacterial agents. |
| |
Keywords: | Drug Discovery NMR screening |
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|