Publication | Open Access
Inhibiting the β-Lactamase of <i>Mycobacterium tuberculosis</i> (Mtb) with Novel Boronic Acid Transition-State Inhibitors (BATSIs)
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Citations
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References
2015
Year
BacteriologyAntimicrobial ChemotherapyCefoperazone AnalogueDrug ResistanceMolecular PharmacologyMycobacterium TuberculosisAntimicrobial ResistanceInhibitory ActivityHealth SciencesAntimicrobial Drug DiscoveryBiochemistryTuberculosisAntibacterial AgentEffective InhibitionPharmacologyMolecular ModelingClinical MicrobiologyRational Drug DesignMicrobiologyMedicineDrug Discovery
BlaC, the single chromosomally encoded β-lactamase of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, has been identified as a promising target for novel therapies that rely upon β-lactamase inhibition. Boronic acid transition-state inhibitors (BATSIs) are a class of β-lactamase inhibitors which permit rational inhibitor design by combinations of various R1 and R2 side chains. To explore the structural determinants of effective inhibition, we screened a panel of 25 BATSIs to explore key structure-function relationships. We identified a cefoperazone analogue, EC19, which displayed slow, time-dependent inhibition against BlaC with a potency similar to that of clavulanate (Ki* of 0.65 ± 0.05 μM). To further characterize the molecular basis of inhibition, we solved the crystallographic structure of the EC19-BlaC(N172A) complex and expanded our analysis to variant enzymes. The results of this structure-function analysis encourage the design of a novel class of β-lactamase inhibitors, BATSIs, to be used against Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
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