Redirecting raltitrexed from cancer cell thymidylate synthase to Mycobacterium tuberculosis phosphopantetheinyl transferase.

Amrita Singh,Samantha Ottavi,Inna Krieger, Kyle Planck,Andrew Perkowski,Takushi Kaneko, Andrew M Davis, Christine Suh, David Zhang, Laurent Goullieux, Alexander Alex, Christine Roubert, Mark Gardner,Marian Preston,Dave M Smith,Yan Ling,Julia Roberts, Bastien Cautain, Anna Upton, Christopher B Cooper, Natalya Serbina, Zaid Tanvir, John Mosior,Ouathek Ouerfelli,Guangli Yang, Ben S Gold,Kyu Y Rhee,James C Sacchettini,Nader Fotouhi,Jeffrey Aubé,Carl Nathan

Science advances(2024)

引用 0|浏览1
暂无评分
摘要
There is a compelling need to find drugs active against Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb). 4'-Phosphopantetheinyl transferase (PptT) is an essential enzyme in Mtb that has attracted interest as a potential drug target. We optimized a PptT assay, used it to screen 422,740 compounds, and identified raltitrexed, an antineoplastic antimetabolite, as the most potent PptT inhibitor yet reported. While trying unsuccessfully to improve raltitrexed's ability to kill Mtb and remove its ability to kill human cells, we learned three lessons that may help others developing antibiotics. First, binding of raltitrexed substantially changed the configuration of the PptT active site, complicating molecular modeling of analogs based on the unliganded crystal structure or the structure of cocrystals with inhibitors of another class. Second, minor changes in the raltitrexed molecule changed its target in Mtb from PptT to dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR). Third, the structure-activity relationship for over 800 raltitrexed analogs only became interpretable when we quantified and characterized the compounds' intrabacterial accumulation and transformation.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要