Structure, In Vivo Detection, and Antibacterial Activity of Metabolites of SQ109, an Anti-Infective Drug Candidate.
Satish R MalwalMatthew D ZimmermanNadine AlvarezJansy P SarathyVeronique Anne DartoisCarol A NacyEric OldfieldPublished in: ACS infectious diseases (2021)
SQ109 is a drug candidate for the treatment of tuberculosis (TB). It is thought to target primarily the protein MmpL3 in Mycobacterium tuberculosis, but it also inhibits the growth of some other bacteria. SQ109 is metabolized by the liver, and it has been proposed that some of its metabolites might be responsible for its activity against TB. Here, we synthesized six potential P450 metabolites of SQ109 and used these as well as 10 other likely metabolites as standards in a mass spectrometry study of M. tuberculosis-infected rabbits treated with SQ109, in addition to testing all 16 putative metabolites for antibacterial activity. We found that there were just two major metabolites in lung tissue: a hydroxy-adamantyl analog of SQ109 and N'-adamantylethylenediamine. Neither of these, or the other potential metabolites tested, inhibited the growth of M. tuberculosis or of M. smegmatis, Bacillus subtilis, or E. coli, making it unlikely that an SQ109 metabolite contributes to its antibacterial activity. In the rabbit TB model, it is thus the gradual accumulation of nonmetabolized SQ109 in tissues to therapeutic levels that leads to good efficacy. Our results also provide new insights into how SQ109 binds to its target MmpL3, based on our mass spectroscopy results which indicate that the charge in SQ109 is primarily localized on the geranyl nitrogen, explaining the very short distance to a key Asp found in the X-ray structure of SQ109 bound to MmpL3.
Keyphrases
- mycobacterium tuberculosis
- ms ms
- mass spectrometry
- pulmonary tuberculosis
- high resolution
- adverse drug
- gene expression
- magnetic resonance imaging
- escherichia coli
- bacillus subtilis
- hiv aids
- high performance liquid chromatography
- magnetic resonance
- liquid chromatography
- silver nanoparticles
- loop mediated isothermal amplification