Unifying the Aminohexopyranose- and Peptidyl-Nucleoside Antibiotics: Implications for Antibiotic Design.
Catherine M SerranoHariprasada Reddy Kanna ReddyDaniel EilerMichael KochBen I C TrescoLouis R BarrowsRyan T VanderLindenCharles A TestaPaul R SebaharRyan E LooperPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2020)
In search of new anti-tuberculars compatible with anti-retroviral therapy we re-identified amicetin as a lead compound. Amicetin's binding to the 70S ribosomal subunit of Thermus thermophilus (Tth) has been unambiguously determined by crystallography and reveals it to occupy the peptidyl transferase center P-site of the ribosome. The amicetin binding site overlaps significantly with that of the well-known protein synthesis inhibitor balsticidin S. Amicetin, however, is the first compound structurally characterized to bind to the P-site with demonstrated selectivity for the inhibition of prokaryotic translation. The natural product-ribosome structure enabled the synthesis of simplified analogues that retained both potency and selectivity for the inhibition of prokaryotic translation.