Potency Increase of Spiroketal Analogs of Membrane Inserting Indolyl Mannich Base Antimycobacterials Is Due to Acquisition of MmpL3 Inhibition.
Ming LiZheng Yen PhuaYu XiZhujun XuSamuel A NyantakyiWei LiMary JacksonMing Wah WongYulin LamShu-Sin ChngMei Lin GoThomas DickPublished in: ACS infectious diseases (2020)
Chemistry campaigns identified amphiphilic indolyl Mannich bases as novel membrane-permeabilizing antimycobacterials. Spiroketal analogs of this series showed increased potency, and the lead compound 1 displayed efficacy in a mouse model of tuberculosis. Yet the mechanism by which the spiroketal moiety accomplished the potency "jump" remained unknown. Consistent with its membrane-permeabilizing mechanism, no resistant mutants could be isolated against indolyl Mannich base 2 lacking the spiroketal moiety. In contrast, mutations resistant against spiroketal analog 1 were obtained in mycobacterial membrane protein large 3 (MmpL3), a proton motive force (PMF)-dependent mycolate transporter. Thus, we hypothesized that the potency jump observed for 1 may be due to MmpL3 inhibition acquired by the addition of the spiroketal moiety. Here we showed that 1 inhibited MmpL3 flippase activity without loss of the PMF, colocalized with MmpL3tb-GFP in intact organisms, and yielded a consistent docking pose within the "common inhibitor binding pocket" of MmpL3. The presence of the spiroketal motif in 1 ostensibly augmented its interaction with MmpL3, an outcome not observed in the nonspiroketal analog 2, which displayed no cross-resistance to mmpL3 mutants, dissipated the PMF, and docked poorly in the MmpL3 binding pocket. Surprisingly, 2 inhibited MmpL3 flippase activity, which may be an epiphenomenon arising from its wider membrane disruptive effects. Hence, we conclude that the potency increase associated with the spiroketal analog 1 is linked to the acquisition of a second mechanism, MmpL3 inhibition. In contrast, the nonspiroketal analog 2 acts pleiotropically, affecting several cell membrane-embedded targets, including MmpL3, through its membrane permeabilizing and depolarizing effects.