Mode of Action of Kanglemycin A, an Ansamycin Natural Product that Is Active against Rifampicin-Resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Hamed Mosaei(Newcastle University), Vadim Molodtsov(Pennsylvania State University), Bernhard Kepplinger(Demuris (United Kingdom)), John Harbottle(Newcastle University), Christopher Moon(Public Health England), Rose E. Jeeves(Public Health England), Lucia Ceccaroni(Newcastle University), Yeonoh Shin(Pennsylvania State University), Stephanie Morton-Laing(Newcastle University), Emma C. L. Marrs(Freeman Hospital), Corinne Wills(Newcastle University), W. Clegg(Newcastle University), Yulia Yuzenkova(Newcastle University), John D. Perry(Freeman Hospital), Joanna Bacon(Public Health England), Jeff Errington(Demuris (United Kingdom)), Nick Allenby(Demuris (United Kingdom)), Michael J. Hall(Newcastle University), Katsuhiko Murakami(Pennsylvania State University), Nikolay Zenkin(Newcastle University)
Molecular Cell
September 20, 2018
Cited by 60Open Access
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Abstract

Antibiotic-resistant bacterial pathogens pose an urgent healthcare threat, prompting a demand for new medicines. We report the mode of action of the natural ansamycin antibiotic kanglemycin A (KglA). KglA binds bacterial RNA polymerase at the rifampicin-binding pocket but maintains potency against RNA polymerases containing rifampicin-resistant mutations. KglA has antibiotic activity against rifampicin-resistant Gram-positive bacteria and multidrug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MDR-M. tuberculosis). The X-ray crystal structures of KglA with the Escherichia coli RNA polymerase holoenzyme and Thermus thermophilus RNA polymerase-promoter complex reveal an altered-compared with rifampicin-conformation of KglA within the rifampicin-binding pocket. Unique deoxysugar and succinate ansa bridge substituents make additional contacts with a separate, hydrophobic pocket of RNA polymerase and preclude the formation of initial dinucleotides, respectively. Previous ansa-chain modifications in the rifamycin series have proven unsuccessful. Thus, KglA represents a key starting point for the development of a new class of ansa-chain derivatized ansamycins to tackle rifampicin resistance.


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