Ribosome Rescue Inhibitors Kill Actively Growing and Nonreplicating Persister Mycobacterium tuberculosis Cells

JN Alumasa, PS Manzanillo, ND Peterson… - ACS Infectious …, 2017 - ACS Publications
JN Alumasa, PS Manzanillo, ND Peterson, T Lundrigan, AD Baughn, JS Cox, KC Keiler
ACS Infectious Diseases, 2017ACS Publications
The emergence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB) strains that are resistant to most or all
available antibiotics has created a severe problem for treating tuberculosis and has spurred
a quest for new antibiotic targets. Here, we demonstrate that trans-translation is essential for
growth of MTB and is a viable target for development of antituberculosis drugs. We also
show that an inhibitor of trans-translation, KKL-35, is bactericidal against MTB under both
aerobic and anoxic conditions. Biochemical experiments show that this compound targets …
The emergence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB) strains that are resistant to most or all available antibiotics has created a severe problem for treating tuberculosis and has spurred a quest for new antibiotic targets. Here, we demonstrate that trans-translation is essential for growth of MTB and is a viable target for development of antituberculosis drugs. We also show that an inhibitor of trans-translation, KKL-35, is bactericidal against MTB under both aerobic and anoxic conditions. Biochemical experiments show that this compound targets helix 89 of the 23S rRNA. In silico molecular docking predicts a binding pocket for KKL-35 adjacent to the peptidyl-transfer center in a region not targeted by conventional antibiotics. Computational solvent mapping suggests that this pocket is a druggable hot spot for small molecule binding. Collectively, our findings reveal a new target for antituberculosis drug development and provide critical insight on the mechanism of antibacterial action for KKL-35 and related 1,3,4-oxadiazole benzamides.
ACS Publications
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果