Login / Signup

A Coumarin-Based Analogue of Thiacetazone as Dual Covalent Inhibitor and Potential Fluorescent Label of HadA in Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

Asma FarjallahLaurent Roberto ChiarelliMartin ForbakGiulia DegiacomiMathieu DanelFernanda GoncalvesChantal CarayonCendrine SeguinMarco FumagalliMonika ZáhorszkáElodie VegaSouhir AbidAnna GrzegorzewiczMary JacksonAntonio PeixotoJana KordulákováMaria Rosalia PascaChristian LherbetStefan Chassaing
Published in: ACS infectious diseases (2021)
A novel coumarin-based molecule, designed as a fluorescent surrogate of a thiacetazone-derived antitubercular agent, was quickly and easily synthesized from readily available starting materials. This small molecule, coined Coum-TAC, exhibited a combination of appropriate physicochemical and biological properties, including resistance toward hydrolysis and excellent antitubercular efficiency similar to that of well-known thiacetazone derivatives, as well as efficient covalent labeling of HadA, a relevant therapeutic target to combat Mycobacterium tuberculosis. More remarkably, Coum-TAC was successfully implemented as an imaging probe that is capable of labeling Mycobacterium tuberculosis in a selective manner, with an enrichment at the level of the poles, thus giving for the first time relevant insights about the polar localization of HadA in the mycobacteria.
Keyphrases