Login / Signup

Discovery of a Novel Mycobacterial F-ATP Synthase Inhibitor and its Potency in Combination with Diarylquinolines.

Adam HotraPriya RagunathanPearly Shuyi NgPattarakiat SeankongsukAmaravadhi HarikishoreJickky Palmae SarathyWuan-Geok SawUmayal LakshmananPatcharaporn Sae-LaoNitin Pal KaliaJoon ShinRevathy KalyanasundaramSivaraj AnbarasuKrupakar ParthasarathyChaudhari Namrata PradeepHarshyaa MakhijaPeter DrögeAnders PoulsenJocelyn Hui Ling TanKevin PetheThomas DickRoderick W BatesGerhard Grüber
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2020)
The F1 FO -ATP synthase is required for growth and viability of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and is a validated clinical target. A mycobacterium-specific loop of the enzyme's rotary γ subunit plays a role in the coupling of ATP synthesis within the enzyme complex. We report the discovery of a novel antimycobacterial, termed GaMF1, that targets this γ subunit loop. Biochemical and NMR studies show that GaMF1 inhibits ATP synthase activity by binding to the loop. GaMF1 is bactericidal and is active against multidrug- as well as bedaquiline-resistant strains. Chemistry efforts on the scaffold revealed a dynamic structure activity relationship and delivered analogues with nanomolar potencies. Combining GaMF1 with bedaquiline or novel diarylquinoline analogues showed potentiation without inducing genotoxicity or phenotypic changes in a human embryonic stem cell reporter assay. These results suggest that GaMF1 presents an attractive lead for the discovery of a novel class of anti-tuberculosis F-ATP synthase inhibitors.
Keyphrases