Discovery of N -quinazolinone-4-hydroxy-2-quinolone-3-carboxamides as DNA gyrase B-targeted antibacterial agents.
Wenjie XueYaling WangXu LianXueyao LiJing PangJohannes KirchmairKebin WuZunsheng HanXuefu YouHongmin ZhangJie XiaSong WuPublished in: Journal of enzyme inhibition and medicinal chemistry (2022)
Emerging drug resistance is generating an urgent need for novel and effective antibiotics. A promising target that has not yet been addressed by approved antibiotics is the bacterial DNA gyrase subunit B (GyrB), and GyrB inhibitors could be effective against drug-resistant bacteria, such as methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA). Here, we used the 4-hydroxy-2-quinolone fragment to search the Specs database of purchasable compounds for potential inhibitors of GyrB and identified AG-690/11765367, or f1 , as a novel and potent inhibitor of the target protein (IC 50 : 1.21 µM). Structural modification was used to further identify two more potent GyrB inhibitors: f4 (IC 50 : 0.31 µM) and f14 (IC 50 : 0.28 µM). Additional experiments indicated that compound f1 is more potent than the others in terms of antibacterial activity against MRSA (MICs: 4-8 µg/mL), non-toxic to HUVEC and HepG2 (CC 50 : approximately 50 µM), and metabolically stable (t 1/2 : > 372.8 min for plasma; 24.5 min for liver microsomes). In summary, this study showed that the discovered N-quinazolinone-4-hydroxy-2-quinolone-3-carboxamides are novel GyrB-targeted antibacterial agents; compound f1 is promising for further development.
Keyphrases
- drug resistant
- staphylococcus aureus
- methicillin resistant staphylococcus aureus
- anti inflammatory
- multidrug resistant
- silver nanoparticles
- circulating tumor
- acinetobacter baumannii
- cell free
- single molecule
- cancer therapy
- small molecule
- high throughput
- drug delivery
- protein protein
- circulating tumor cells
- binding protein
- single cell
- wound healing
- highly efficient
- drug administration