A class of selective antibacterials derived from a protein kinase inhibitor pharmacophore

J. Richard Miller(Pfizer (United States)), Steve Dunham(Pfizer (United States)), Igor Mochalkin(Pfizer (United States)), Craig Banotai(Pfizer (United States)), Matthew D. Bowman(Pfizer (United States)), Susan Buist(Pfizer (United States)), Bill Dunkle(Pfizer (United States)), Debra Hanna(Pfizer (United States)), H. James Harwood(Pfizer (United States)), Michael D. Huband(Pfizer (United States)), Alla Karnovsky(Pfizer (United States)), Michael Kuhn(Pfizer (United States)), Chris Limberakis(Pfizer (United States)), Jia Y. Liu(Pfizer (United States)), Shawn Mehrens(Pfizer (United States)), W. Thomas Mueller(Pfizer (United States)), Lakshmi Narasimhan(Pfizer (United States)), Adam Ogden(Pfizer (United States)), Jeffrey F. Ohren(Pfizer (United States)), J. V. N. Vara Prasad(Pfizer (United States)), John A. Shelly(Pfizer (United States)), Laura A. Skerlos(Pfizer (United States)), Mark C. Sulavik(Pfizer (United States)), V. Hayden Thomas(Pfizer (United States)), Steve VanderRoest(Pfizer (United States)), LiAnn Wang(Pfizer (United States)), Zhigang Wang(Pfizer (United States)), Amy Whitton(Pfizer (United States)), Tong Zhu(Pfizer (United States)), C. Kendall Stover(Pfizer (United States))
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
January 22, 2009
Cited by 159Open Access
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Abstract

As the need for novel antibiotic classes to combat bacterial drug resistance increases, the paucity of leads resulting from target-based antibacterial screening of pharmaceutical compound libraries is of major concern. One explanation for this lack of success is that antibacterial screening efforts have not leveraged the eukaryotic bias resulting from more extensive chemistry efforts targeting eukaryotic gene families such as G protein-coupled receptors and protein kinases. Consistent with a focus on antibacterial target space resembling these eukaryotic targets, we used whole-cell screening to identify a series of antibacterial pyridopyrimidines derived from a protein kinase inhibitor pharmacophore. In bacteria, the pyridopyrimidines target the ATP-binding site of biotin carboxylase (BC), which catalyzes the first enzymatic step of fatty acid biosynthesis. These inhibitors are effective in vitro and in vivo against fastidious gram-negative pathogens including Haemophilus influenzae. Although the BC active site has architectural similarity to those of eukaryotic protein kinases, inhibitor binding to the BC ATP-binding site is distinct from the protein kinase-binding mode, such that the inhibitors are selective for bacterial BC. In summary, we have discovered a promising class of potent antibacterials with a previously undescribed mechanism of action. In consideration of the eukaryotic bias of pharmaceutical libraries, our findings also suggest that pursuit of a novel inhibitor leads for antibacterial targets with active-site structural similarity to known human targets will likely be more fruitful than the traditional focus on unique bacterial target space, particularly when structure-based and computational methodologies are applied to ensure bacterial selectivity.


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