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Structure-Based Design of Bisubstrate Tetracycline Destructase Inhibitors That Block Flavin Redox Cycling.

Emily E WillifordCaitlin M DeAngeloKevin S BlakeHirdesh KumarKendrick K LamKatherine V JonesNiraj H ToliaGautam DantasTimothy A Wencewicz
Published in: Journal of medicinal chemistry (2023)
Tetracyclines (TCs) are an important class of antibiotics threatened by an emerging new resistance mechanism─enzymatic inactivation. These TC-inactivating enzymes, also known as tetracycline destructases (TDases), inactivate all known TC antibiotics, including drugs of last resort. Combination therapies consisting of a TDase inhibitor and a TC antibiotic represent an attractive strategy for overcoming this type of antibiotic resistance. Here, we report the structure-based design, synthesis, and evaluation of bifunctional TDase inhibitors derived from anhydrotetracycline (aTC). By appending a nicotinamide isostere to the C9 position of the aTC D-ring, we generated bisubstrate TDase inhibitors. The bisubstrate inhibitors have extended interactions with TDases by spanning both the TC and presumed NADPH binding pockets. This simultaneously blocks TC binding and the reduction of FAD by NADPH while "locking" TDases in an unproductive FAD "out" conformation.
Keyphrases
  • reactive oxygen species
  • binding protein
  • hydrogen peroxide
  • transcription factor
  • dna binding