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Target repurposing unravels avermectins and derivatives as novel antibiotics inhibiting energy-coupling factor transporters (ECFTs).

Jörg HaupenthalMuhammad RafehiAndreas Martin KanyAnne LespineKatja StefanAnna Katharina Herta HirschSven Marcel Stefan
Published in: Archiv der Pharmazie (2024)
Energy-coupling factor transporters (ECFTs) are membrane-bound ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters in prokaryotes that are found in pathogens against which novel antibiotics are urgently needed. To date, just 54 inhibitors of three molecular-structural classes with mostly weak inhibitory activity are known. Target repurposing is a strategy that transfers knowledge gained from a well-studied protein family to under-studied targets of phylogenetic relation. Forty-eight human ABC transporters are known that may harbor structural motifs similar to ECFTs to which particularly multitarget compounds may bind. We assessed 31 multitarget compounds which together target the entire druggable human ABC transporter proteome against ECFTs, of which nine showed inhibitory activity (hit rate 29.0%) and four demonstrated moderate to strong inhibition of an ECFT (IC 50 values between 4.28 and 50.2 µM) as well as antibacterial activity against ECFT-expressing Streptococcus pneumoniae. Here, ivermectin was the most potent candidate (MIC 95 : 22.8 µM), and analysis of five ivermectin derivatives revealed moxidectin as one of the most potent ECFT-targeting antibacterial agents (IC 50 : 2.23 µM; MIC 95 : 2.91 µM). Distinct molecular-structural features of avermectins and derivatives as well as the differential biological response of the hit compounds in general provided first indications with respect to the structure-activity relationships and mode of action, respectively.
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