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Identification of an Optimized Clinical Development Candidate from Cilagicin, an Antibiotic That Evades Resistance by Dual Polyprenyl Phosphate Binding.

Adam F RosenzweigKaylyn SpottonAbir BhattacharjeeAdrián Morales-AmadorSean F Brady
Published in: ACS infectious diseases (2024)
Cilagicin is a dual polyprenyl phosphate binding lipodepsipeptide antibiotic with strong activity against clinically relevant Gram-positive pathogens while evading antibiotic resistance. Cilagicin showed high serum binding that reduced its in vivo efficacy. Cilagicin-BP, which contains a biphenyl moiety in place of the N-terminal myristic acid found on cilagicin, showed reduced serum binding and increased in vivo efficacy but decreased potency against some pathogens. Here, we manipulated the acyl tail and the peptide core of cilagicin to identify an optimized collection of structural features that maintain potent antibiotic activity against a wide range of pathogens in the presence of serum. This led to the identification of the optimized antibiotic dodecacilagicin, which contains an N-terminal dodecanoic acid. Dodecacilagicin exhibits low MICs against clinically relevant pathogens in the presence of serum, retains polyprenyl phosphate binding, and evades resistance development even after long-term antibiotic exposure, making dodecacilagicin an appealing candidate for further therapeutic development.
Keyphrases
  • gram negative
  • dna binding
  • antimicrobial resistance
  • binding protein
  • multidrug resistant