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Toward Catalytic Antibiotics: Redesign of Fluoroquinolones to Catalytically Fragment Chromosomal DNA.

Moshe N GoldmeierSofya KatzFabian GlaserValery BelakhovAlina KhononovTimor Baasov
Published in: ACS infectious diseases (2021)
A library of ciprofloxacin-nuclease conjugates was designed and synthesized to investigate their potential as catalytic antibiotics. The Cu(II) complexes of the new designer compounds (i) showed excellent in vitro hydrolytic and oxidative DNase activity, (ii) showed good antibacterial activity against both Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria, and (iii) proved to be highly potent bacterial DNA gyrase inhibitors via a mechanism that involves stabilization of the fluoroquinolone-topoisomerase-DNA ternary complex. Furthermore, the Cu(II) complexes of two of the new designer compounds were shown to fragment supercoiled plasmid DNA into linear DNA in the presence of DNA gyrase, demonstrating a "proof of concept" in vitro. These ciprofloxacin-nuclease conjugates can therefore serve as models with which to develop next-generation, in vivo functioning catalytic antimicrobials.
Keyphrases
  • circulating tumor
  • cell free
  • single molecule
  • gram negative
  • nucleic acid
  • multidrug resistant
  • pseudomonas aeruginosa
  • drug delivery
  • cancer therapy
  • gene expression
  • risk assessment
  • transcription factor