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Serendipitous Discovery of a Competitive Inhibitor of FraB, a Salmonella Deglycase and Drug Target.

Pankajavalli ThirugnanasambanthamSravya KovvaliAustin CoolYuan GaoAnice Sabag-DaigleErin F BoulangerMark Mitton-FryAngela Di CapuaEdward J BehrmanVicki H WysockiSteffen LindertBrian M M AhmerVenkat Gopalan
Published in: Pathogens (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Although salmonellosis, an infectious disease, is a significant global healthcare burden, there are no Salmonella -specific vaccines or therapeutics for humans. Motivated by our finding that FraB, a Salmonella deglycase responsible for fructose-asparagine catabolism, is a viable drug target, we initiated experimental and computational efforts to identify inhibitors of FraB. To this end, our recent high-throughput screening initiative yielded almost exclusively uncompetitive inhibitors of FraB. In parallel with this advance, we report here how a separate structural and computational biology investigation of FrlB, a FraB paralog, led to the serendipitous discovery that 2-deoxy-6-phosphogluconate is a competitive inhibitor of FraB (K I ~ 3 μM). However, this compound was ineffective in inhibiting the growth of Salmonella in a liquid culture. In addition to poor uptake, cellular metabolic transformations by a Salmonella dehydrogenase and different phosphatases likely undermined the efficacy of 2-deoxy-6-phosphogluconate in live-cell assays. These insights inform our ongoing efforts to synthesize non-hydrolyzable/-metabolizable analogs of 2-deoxy-6-phosphogluconate. We showcase our findings largely to (re)emphasize the role of serendipity and the importance of multi-pronged approaches in drug discovery.
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