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A Cephalosporin Prochelator Inhibits New Delhi Metallo-β-lactamase 1 without Removing Zinc.

Abigail C JacksonJacqueline M Zaengle-BaroneElena A PuccioKatherine J Franz
Published in: ACS infectious diseases (2020)
Antibacterial drug resistance is a rapidly growing clinical threat, partially due to expression of β-lactamase enzymes, which confer resistance to bacteria by hydrolyzing and inactivating β-lactam antibiotics. The increasing prevalence of metallo-β-lactamases poses a unique challenge, as currently available β-lactamase inhibitors target the active site of serine β-lactamases but are ineffective against the zinc-containing active sites of metallo-β-lactamases. There is an urgent need for metallo-β-lactamase inhibitors and antibiotics that circumvent resistance mediated by metallo-β-lactamases in order to extend the utility of existing β-lactam antibiotics for treating infection. Here we investigated the antibacterial chelator-releasing prodrug PcephPT (2-((((6R,7R)-2-carboxy-8-oxo-7-(2-phenylacetamido)-5-thia-1-azabicyclo[4.2.0]oct-2-en-3-yl)methyl)thio) pyridine 1-oxide) as an inhibitor of New Delhi metallo-β-lactamase 1 (NDM-1). PcephPT is an experimental compound that we have previously shown inhibits growth of β-lactamase-expressing E. coli using a mechanism that is dependent on both copper availability and β-lactamase expression. Here, we found that PcephPT, in addition to being a copper-dependent antibacterial compound, inhibits hydrolysis activity of purified NDM-1with an IC50 of 7.6 μM without removing zinc from the active site and restores activity of the carbapenem antibiotic meropenem against NDM-1-producing E. coli. This work demonstrates that targeting a metal-binding pharmacophore to β-lactamase-producing bacteria is a promising strategy for inhibition of both bacterial growth and metallo-β-lactamases.
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