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Synthesis, Antibacterial Activity, and Nephrotoxicity of Polymyxin B Analogues Modified at Leu-7, d-Phe-6, and the N-Terminus Enabled by S-Lipidation.

Paul W R HarrisAndrew SiowSung-Hyun YangAndrew D WadsworthLyndia TanYann HermantYubing MaoChalice AnCameron C HannaAlan J CameronJane R AllisonAparajita ChakrabortyScott A FergusonSonya MrosKiel HardsGregory M CookDeborah A WilliamsonGlen P CarterSusanna T S ChanGavin A PainterVeronika SanderAlan J DavidsonMargaret A Brimble
Published in: ACS infectious diseases (2022)
With the post-antibiotic era rapidly approaching, many have turned their attention to developing new treatments, often by structural modification of existing antibiotics. Polymyxins, a family of lipopeptide antibiotics that are used as a last line of defense in the clinic, have recently developed resistance and exhibit significant nephrotoxicity issues. Using thiol-ene chemistry, the facile preparation of six unique S-lipidated building blocks was demonstrated and used to generate lipopeptide mimetics upon incorporation into solid-phase peptide synthesis (SPPS). We then designed and synthesized 38 polymyxin analogues, incorporating these unique building blocks at the N-terminus, or to replace hydrophobic residues at positions 6 and 7 of the native lipopeptides. Several polymyxin analogues bearing one or more S - linked lipids were found to be equipotent to polymyxin, showed minimal kidney nephrotoxicity, and demonstrated activity against several World Health Organisation (WHO) priority pathogens. The S-lipidation strategy has demonstrated potential as a novel approach to prepare innovative new lipopeptide antibiotics.
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