(Created page with "==Highlights== * KatG-independent InhA inhibitors mimicking isoniazid cidality * GSK693 first DI showing oral ''in vivo'' efficacy similar to isoniazid...")
 
 
(No difference)

Latest revision as of 10:35, 6 April 2017

Highlights

  • KatG-independent InhA inhibitors mimicking isoniazid cidality
  • GSK693 first DI showing oral in vivo efficacy similar to isoniazid
  • Retain activity against M(X)DR clinical isolates
  • Physicochemical properties akin to antitubercular drugs

Last year, Mycobacterium tuberculosis had the doubtful honor of being the top infectious killer worldwide. The current 6-month treatment, which was developed more than 30 years ago, has saved million of lives but bears the drawback of poor compliance; hence, the world needs a new shorter and safer TB treatment.

The biochemical screening of GSK compound library performed by Martinez et al. has identified new KatG-independent inhibitor of InhA active against M(X)DR Mtb strains, good drug-like properties, and in vivo activity similar to isoniazid overcoming the resistance and toxicological issues of the former drug.

Abstract

Despite being one of the first antitubercular agents identified, isoniazid (INH) is still the most prescribed drug for prophylaxis and tuberculosis (TB) treatment and, together with rifampicin, the pillars of current chemotherapy. A high percentage of isoniazid resistance is linked to mutations in the pro-drug activating enzyme KatG, so the discovery of direct inhibitors (DI) of the enoyl-ACP reductase (InhA) has been pursued by many groups leading to the identification of different enzyme inhibitors, active against Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb ), but with poor physicochemical properties to be considered as preclinical candidates. Here, we present a series of InhA DI active against multidrug (MDR) and extensively (XDR) drug-resistant clinical isolates as well as in TB murine models when orally dosed that can be a promising foundation for a future treatment.

Keywords

Tuberculosis ; Antibiotic ; InhA ; Bactericidal ; Drug discovery ; Single-cell imaging ; Catalase

1. Introduction

Although most of the drugs for tuberculosis were discovered > 50 years ago, TB accounts for about 1.4 million deaths every year (Zumla et al., 2013 ). The majority of the TB cases are treatable with the current long and complex regimen of drugs, although the lack of adherence due to adverse effect is not unusual, leading to suboptimal responses and rising incidences of M(X)DR cases worldwide. In the last 40 years, only two new drugs have been approved for the treatment of MDR-TB under specific conditions: bedaquiline and delamanid (Andries et al., 2005  and Thakare et al., 2015 ). Thus, there is a critical need for the development of drugs with shorter, simpler regimens as well as novel mechanisms of action that can be used for treatment of drug-resistant forms of the disease.

Both target-based (Makarov et al., 2009 ) and phenotypic screening (Ballell et al., 2013 , Lechartier et al., 2014 , Mak et al., 2012  and Pethe et al., 2010 ) approaches have been employed for the identification of antitubercular drug leads. While a limited but significant number of examples exist for the latter (Abrahams et al., 2012 , Makarov et al., 2009  and Remuinan et al., 2013 ), target-based approaches have encountered very limited success as previously demonstrated in the antibacterial field (Abrahams et al., 2012  and Payne et al., 2007 ). Rather than invalidating the approach per se, this situation highlights the disconnection between concepts like genetic validation of target essentiality and the amenability of that target for drug discovery. A deeper understanding of system biology and the mechanisms underlying antibiotic killing are important for the discovery of new antimicrobial therapies through target-based approaches. Additionally, for reasons that are not always obvious, some targets are clearly more chemically tractable than others. For example, protein and cell wall bio-synthesis and DNA gyrase have delivered multiple classes of published leads and marketed drugs, whereas there are no known inhibitors for many other essential gene products, despite a long history of antibacterial research (Kohanski et al., 2010 ). In the antitubercular field, only a very limited number of targets such as InhA, RpoB, DNA Gyrase, ATP synthase, and DprE1 have been shown to be behind the action of potent bactericidal drugs or promising leads.

Isoniazid is a frontline anti-TB drug targeting InhA and is an essential component of TB treatment regimen. Despite the seemingly simple structure of INH, its mode of action has remained elusive for many years (Vilcheze and Jacobs, 2007 ). INH penetrates the tubercle bacilli by passive diffusion and is activated by the bacterial anti -oxidant enzyme KatG to a range of reactive species and isonicotinic acid. Relevant reactive species form adducts with nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD), which are able to interfere with NAD-utilizing enzymes, primarily the enoyl-ACP reductase encoded by the inhA gene, leading to the blockage of mycolic acid synthesis and delivering the lethal blow to M. tuberculosis . The dependency on KatG activation for INH-mediated killing is also the source of the main clinical weakness associated with the use of INH, as between 40% and 95% of INH-resistant MTB clinical isolates have mutations in katG , leading to decreased activation of INH to its active form ( Hazbon et al., 2006  and Seifert et al., 2015 ). While mutations are also detected in clinical isolates in the inhA promoter region, these can be successfully treated in most instances by increasing the dose of isoniazid.

Different classes of direct InhA inhibitors have been identified previously using high-throughput screening, Encoded Library Technology, and in silico design strategies ( Lu et al., 2010 , Manjunatha et al., 2015 , Pan and Tonge, 2012 , Shirude et al., 2013 , Sink et al., 2015 , Vilcheze et al., 2011  and Encinas et al., 2014 ). Additionally, natural product pyridomycin has been found to operate via InhA inhibition ( Hartkoorn et al., 2012  and Lu et al., 2010 ). Most of these tended to show a lack of correlation between enzymatic inhibition and whole-cell activity, have moderate potencies, narrow selectivity windows or poor absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion (ADME) properties, making them unsuitable for further progression as drug leads.

GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), under the sponsorship of the TB Alliance, has carried out a screen against InhA using the GSK compound collection and has identified the thiadiazole series as the most promising antitubercular family. In this study, we present the novel and selective lead compound and its attractive antitubercular properties.

2. Materials and methods

The human biological samples were sourced ethically and their research use was according to the terms of the informed consent.

All animal studies were ethically reviewed and carried out in accordance with European Directive 2010/63/EU and the GSK Policy on the Care, Welfare and Treatment of Animals.

2.1. Compound Synthesis

GSK613 and GSK625 were obtained from commercial sources. GSK693 was synthesized as described in the patent (Castro-Pichel et al., 2012 ). Optical rotations were measured on a Rudolph AUTOPOL V polarimeter at room temperature using a cell of 0.5 dm. 1 H NMR spectra were recorded on a Bruker DPX 400 MHz NMR spectrometer. Measurements were made at a temperature of 295 K, and are reported in ppm using tetramethylsilane or solvent as an internal standard (DMSO-d6 at 2.50 ppm). The coupling constants (J ) are given in Hz, and the splitting patterns are designated as follows: s, singlet; bs, broad singlet; d, doublet; and m, multiplet. 13 C NMR spectra were recorded on a Bruker DPX 400 spectrometer at 295 K and are reported in ppm using solvent as an internal standard (DMSO-d6 at 39.5 ppm). Analytical purity was ≥ 95%, as determined by 1 H-NMR and HPLC analysis. Positive ion mass spectra were acquired using a QSTAR Elite (AB Sciex Instruments) mass spectrometer, equipped with a turbospray source, over a mass range of 250–700, with a scan time of 1 s. The elemental composition was calculated using Analyst QS 2.0 software.

(S)-1-(4-methylthiazol-2-yl)-1-(5-((1-((2-methylthiazol-4-yl)methyl)-1H-pyrazol-3-yl)amino)-1,3,4-thiadiazol-2-yl)ethanol (GSK693) : [α]D20  = + 119 (c = 1, MeOH). 1 H NMR (300 MHz, DMSO-d6 ): δ ppm 10.93 (bs, 1H, − NH), 7.75 (d, J  = 2.20 Hz, 1H), 7.38 (bs, 1H), 7.33 (s, 1H, − OH), 7.28–7.29 (m, 1H), 6.03 (d, J  = 2.27 Hz, 1H), 5.32 (s, 2H), 2.68 (s, 3H), 2.37 (s, 3H), 2.02 (d, J  = 7.03 Hz, 3H). 13 C-NMR (100 MHz, DMSO-d6 ): δ ppm: 17.38, 19.18, 28.77, 51.32, 74.67, 94.29, 115.29, 117.15, 132.43, 148.65, 151.73, 152.42,156.50, 164.66, 166.28, 175.79. HRMS (m /z ): [M + H]+ calcd. For C16H17N7OS3, 420.0730; found, 420.0717.

2.2. Bacterial strains and culture

M. tuberculosis H37Rv, Mycobacterium smegmatis mc2 155 (Snapper et al., 1990 ), and Mycobacterium bovis BCG Pasteur (Institut Pasteur) were grown at 37 °C in Middlebrook 7H9 broth (Difco) supplemented with 0.025% Tween 80 and 10% albumin–dextrose–catalase (ADC) or on Middlebrook 7H10 plates supplemented with 10% oleic acid–albumin–dextrose–catalase (OADC). Cell-free extracts were done in 7H9 (Difco) supplemented with 100 ml of 10 × AS solution (5% albumin solution in salt: 10 mg albumin, 1.7 mg NaCl in 200 ml water), 2.5 ml of 10% Tween 80 solution, and 0.1% carbon substrate (acetamide, succinate, or glucose). Escherichia coli DH5α was grown in LB broth (LB).

2.3. DNA manipulation, plasmids, and transformation

General molecular biology procedures were used as described previously (Green and Sambrook, 2012 ) or following the manufacturer instructions. E. coli DH5α, M. smegmatis mc2 155, and M. bovis BCG competent cells were prepared for electroporation as described previously ( Goude et al., 2015  and Green and Sambrook, 2012 ).

2.4. Enzymatic purification of InhA

The plasmids were transformed into BL21(DE3) E.'coli cells for protein overexpression. Cells carrying InhA overexpression plasmid were cultured overnight in LB broth media together with 100 μg/ml ampicillin at 37 °C with continuous shaking at 220 rpm. Then a 1% dilution of the inoculum was made (10 ml of the starter culture into 4 × 1 l) in LB broth media with 100 μg/ml ampicillin, and flasks were incubated till the OD600 reached 0.7. Cells were induced with 0.5 mM IPTG at 30–32 °C for 3 h, harvested and resuspended for lysis in 100 ml total volume of 10% glycerol, 25 mM Tris pH 8.0, and 2 mM DTT (freshly made) at 4 °C. Cells were then sonicated 4 × 15 s at maximum amplitude with 45 s incubation on ice between pulses and finally centrifuged at 30.000 g at 4 °C for 1 h.

The supernatants were loaded on 6-ml Resource Q columns, which were pre-equilibrated with 25 mM Tris–HCl pH 8.5, 2 mM DTT. Fractions (2.5 ml) were collected over 20 column volumes (gradient of 0–200 mM NaCl, 25 mM Tris–HCl pH 8.2, 2 mM DTT). The fractions were run out on an SDS–PAGE gel and stained with Coomassie. The most concentrated ones were selected and pooled to run on a Superdex 16/60 SEC to help decontaminate. The column was equilibrated with 25 mM Tris–HCl pH 8.0, 2 mM DTT, and the pooled fractions were applied to the column at 0.12 ml/min/1 ml fractions were collected in the following buffer: 20 mM Tris–HCl pH 8.0, 2 mM DTT, 0.15 M NaCl. The column was run overnight, the fractions were checked by SDS–PAGE, and activity was verified by enzymatic assay.

2.5. InhA biochemical assays

The trans -2-enoyl-ACP reductase enzyme of M.'tuberculosis catalyzes the last step in the elongation cycle of the FAS-II pathway and reduces the 2.3 double bond of trans-2-enoyl-ACP in a NADH-dependent manner. High-throughput screening (HTS) and led optimization (LO) biochemical assays are based in the oxidation of the cofactor in the presence of dodecenoyl-CoA.

InhA inhibition by file compounds in a high-throughput format was assessed using a substrate-induced quenching (SIQ) assay as described previously (Vazquez et al., 2006 ). Reaction mixtures (3 μl) containing 100 μM test compound, 150 μM dodecenoyl-CoA, 100 μM NAD +, 30 μM NADH, 10 nM resorufin, 0.2% w /v pluronic acid F-127, 10 nM resorufin, 0.01% BSA, 1% DMSO, and 1.25 nM InhA in 30 mM PIPES buffer at pH 6.8 were incubated in glass-bottom 1536-well plates for 1 h at 20 °C and 95% relative humidity. Plates were then read in a confocal microscope (4-Channel Reader, Evotec Technologies) using 1D-FIDA settings with beamscanner, Nd:Yag 532 nm excitation with a laser power of 150 μW for 200 ms/well. Confocal FLINT data from each screening plate were normalized against control wells containing reaction mixtures in the absence of test compounds (high controls) and in the absence of enzyme (low controls). Assay quality was monitored for each plate using the Z ′ factor ( Zhang et al., 1999 ) and the inhibition observed in additional control wells containing a known inhibitor at its IC50 . In order to identify and discard signal quenchers, each plate was pre-read before addition of enzyme.

Enzymatic activity to support LO phase was measured fluorimetrically by following NADH oxidation at λexc = 340 nm and λem = 480 nm, using 50 μM NADH and 50 μM 2-trans-dodecenoyl-CoA (DDCoA) as substrates. Dose–response experiments to determine IC50 were performed using 5 nM InhA, percentage of remaining enzymatic activity (%AR) at different compound concentrations were calculated with the next formula [%AR = 100*((sample − control 2) / (control 1 − control 2))] where sample is the enzymatic activity for each compound concentration, control 1 is enzyme activity in absence of any compound, and control 2 is NADH oxidation in absence of enzyme; IC50 was calculated fitting %AR to a 2-parameter equation [%AR = 100% / (1 + (compound conc / IC50 )^s)], where s is a slope factor; IC50 was calculated using GraFit 5.0.12 software (Eritacus Software Ltd.). All reactions were run in 30 mM PIPES buffer, pH 6.8, at 25 °C.

2.6. Crystallization, data collection, and processing

The InhA:GSK625 complex was crystallized using the hanging drop method; 0.2 mM InhA, 2 mM NAD+ , and 2 mM GSK625 that was dissolved in 100% DMSO were incubated at room temperature for ~ 20 min and screened against sparse-matrix crystallization conditions. The crystals were obtained in 1.1 M sodium malonate, 0.1 M HEPES pH 7.0, and 0.5% (v /v) Jeffamine ED-2001 pH 7.0.

The diffraction data were collected at home source, at 120 K under cryoprotection by a Rigaku Raxis detector coupled to an X-ray generator with a rotating copper anode (λ  = 1.541 Å). Data were processed by Denzo and Scalepack software packages (Otwinowski and Minor, 1997 ). Crystals of the InhA:NAD+ :GSK625 complex belonged to the P21 21 21 space group with four molecules in the ASU. InhA:GSK625 structure was solved by molecular replacement using the PDB entry 1ENY as a search model. The structure was built by Coot and further refined by Phenix (Adams et al., 2010 ) yielding a final model with Rwork  = 20% and Rfree  = 23%. Data processing statistics are given in Supplementary Table 1. PDB ID 1BVR .

2.7. Cloning and overexpression of InhA

Double digestion with Bgl II and Bam HI liberates M. smegmatis and M. tuberculosis inhA genes from plamids pATB15 and pATB14 ( Parish et al., 1997 ), respectively. The 918- and 917-bp fragments were cloned into pATB45 previously linearized by Bam HI digestion. Ligations were performed into E. coli DH5α. The final plasmids were verified by enzymatic fragments analysis and both inhA genes were sequenced. Sequencing was carried out with using the dideoxy chain-termination procedure and reagents from Applied Biosystems (dRhodamine Terminator Cycle Sequencing Ready Reaction kit) in an ABI Prism 310 automated DNA sequencer (Applied Biosystems). The electroporation of M. smegmatis mc2 155 and M. bovis BCG was carried out according to the method of ( Snapper et al., 1990 ), and transformants were selected on Middlebrook 7H10 plates supplemented with 10% OADC and hygromycin 50 μg/ml. Transformant verifications were made by colony PCR by using the PuRe Taq Ready-To-Go PCR Beads kit (GE Healthcare Life Sciences) with the primers colony PCR 1 and 2. The sequences of the primers were as follows: Primer colony 1, 5′-AATCCAAAGTTCAAACGAGGGG-3′; Primer colony 2, 5′-CCACCACCCGATAAGAGAAAGG-3′. The following thermocycler parameters were used: an initial denaturation step of 5 min at 94 °C, followed by 35 cycles of 30 s at 94 °C, 30 s at 62 °C and 3 min at 72 °C, and ending with a final elongation step of 10 min at 72 °C.

Protein expression levels were followed by SDS–PAGE. Cell-free extracts were obtained from M. smegmatis mc2 155 and M. bovis BCG by growing them in 500 ml Middlebrook 7H9 broth with 0.025% Tween 80 and 10% ADC (1 l conical flask) to log phase (OD 600 nm ≈ 0.6) harvested by centrifugation (5000 rpm for 5 min) and resuspended in 5 ml sterile distilled water. A quantity 0.5 ml of M. smegmatis mc2 155 cells was used to inoculate 250 conical flasks containing 100 ml minimal medium with either acetamide 1%, succinate 0.1%, or succinate 0.1% plus acetamide 1%. A quantity 0.5 ml of M. bovis BCG cells was used to inoculate 250 ml conical flasks containing 100 ml minimal medium with either acetate 0.1%, acetate 0.1% plus acetamide 1%, ADC 10% or ADC 10% plus acetamide 1%. Cultures were incubated at 37 °C and harvested after 24 h (M. smegmatis mc2 155) or 7 days (M. bovis BCG).

Cell-free extracts were prepared from both cultures using the Mini-BeadBeater (Biospec Products): 50 ml bacterial cells, resuspended in 1 ml 50 mM HEPES/KOH pH 7.5, 10 mM MgCl2 , 60 mM NH4 Cl, 10% (v /v) glycerol, and 5 mM 2-mercaptoethanol, were added to 0.5 ml of 0.1 mm sterile glass beads and shaken for 1 min three times, incubating the samples on ice 1 min between pulses. The supernatant was recovered after centrifugation. Cell-free extracts were analyzed by SDS–PAGE (Laemmli, 1970 ); protein concentration was determined using the BCA protein assay (Pierce).

2.8. Isolation and characterization of M. tuberculosis H37Rv GSK625-resistant mutants

GSK625-resistant M. tuberculosis H37Rv mutants were isolated by plating 108 CFU on Middlebrook 7H10 plates supplemented with 10% OADC containing the compound at 20 μM (20xMIC). After 4 weeks of incubation at 37 °C, colonies were identified and purified through several passages in inhibitor-containing plates. Single colonies were used to amplify and sequence inhA alleles. DNAs of the 17 resistant mutants were extracted from liquid cultures grown in Middlebrook 7H9 broth supplemented with 0.025% Tween 80 and 10% ADC. One milliliter of culture was centrifuged, and the pellet was resuspended in 500 μl of distilled water and incubated at 90 °C for 1 h and then filtrated by using 0.22 μm filters. Five microliters of the supernatant was used as a source of genomic DNA for amplification of the inhA gene. PCRs of the entire gene were performed for each mutant by using the PuRe Taq Ready-To-Go PCR Beads kit (GE Healthcare Life Sciences). A 988-bp region was amplified with the primers Forward (5′-CAGCTTCCTGGCTTCCGAG-3′) and Reverse (5′-TAACGTTCTCCAGGAACGG-3′), and PCR conditions were an initial denaturation step of 5 min at 94 °C, followed by 40 cycles of 30 s at 94 °C, 30 s at 62 °C, and 3 min at 72 °C and ending with a final elongation step of 10 min 72 °C. PCR products were purified and sequenced using the dRhodamine Terminator Cycle Sequencing Ready Reaction kit (Applied Biosystems) in an ABI Prism 310 automated DNA sequencer (Applied Biosystems).

2.9. Complementation experiments

The whole fabG1-inhA-hemH operon from wild-type H37Rv and mutants carrying the four mutant alleles (M103V, G96V, M103I, and M103T) were cloned in the shuttle vector pSUM36( Ainsa et al., 1996 ). M. tuberculosis H37Rv was transformed with the five plasmids and transformants were selected using kanamycin and verified by colony PCR using the PuRe Taq Ready-To-Go PCR Beads kit (GE Healthcare Life Sciences). The sequences of the primers were as follows: pSUM36_2, 5′-GTTGTGTGGAATTGTGAGCGG-3′; InhArev1, 5′-GAAACGCGATCGACGAGTCGG-3′. The following thermocycler parameters were used: an initial denaturation step of 9 min at 94 °C, followed by 40 cycles of 30 s at 94 °C, 30 s at 64 °C, and 3 min at 72 °C and ending with a final elongation step of 10 min 72 °C. Positive transformants were used MIC determination.

2.10. MIC determination against Mycobacteria

The antitubercular activity against extracellular of intracellular Mycobacterium strains was performed as previously described ( Blanco-Ruano et al., 2015 ).

2.11. MIC against clinical strains

The BACTEC MGIT 960 System (Becton Dickinson) was used to MIC determination in clinical isolates (Institute Carlos III and Hospital Val d'Hebron) following the manufacturer instructions.

2.12. General antimicrobial activity assay

Whole-cell antimicrobial activity was determined by broth microdilution using the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) recommended procedure, Document M7-A7 (Wikler, 2009 ). Compounds have been evaluated against a panel of Gram-positive and Gram-negative organisms, including Enterococcus faecium , Enterococcus faecalis , Haemophilus influenzae , Moraxella catarrhalis , Streptococcus pneumoniae , E. coli, and Streptococcus pyogenes . The MIC was determined as the lowest concentration of compound producing a reduction in the observed fluorescence higher than 80%.

2.13. hERG inhibition determination and cell cytotoxicity assays

hERG Qpatch assay was described by Vasilyev et al. (2006) ). Cell cytotoxicity assays was described by Crouch et al. (1993) .

2.14. Kinetic solubility assay

Here, 5 ml of 10 mM DMSO stock solution was diluted to 100 ml with phosphate-buffered saline, pH 7.4, equilibrated for 1 h at room temperature, and filtered through Millipore Multiscreen HTS-PCF filter plates (MSSL BPC). The eluent was quantified by suitably calibrated flow injection CLND.

2.15. Cytochrome P450 (CYP450)

The P450 inhibition profile of the InhA inhibitors was determined as previously described in reference (Kajbaf et al., 2011 ).

2.16. Tolerability studies

For tolerability studies C57BL/6 female mice of 18–20 g weight were used (n  = 6 mice). Drugs were administered as 1% methyl-cellulose suspensions. The up-and-down method of experimentation is an adaptive procedure for conducting dose–response experiments having yes/no end point. Animals are dosed one at a time at the best estimate MNLD. The dose for each successive animal is adjusted up or down, depending on the outcome of the previous animal. After reaching the reversal of the initial direction (the point where a decreasing dose pattern requires an increase due a tested animals survival or an increasing dose pattern results in a decrease due to lethality), four additional animals are dosed using the same up and down dose pattern. The maximal no lethal dose is calculated using the maximum likelihood algorithm. If any animal died or acute clinical signs were noted, the up-and-down procedure was carried out based on toxicological signs (functional observational battery). According to the up-and-down statistical procedure based on if, two dose levels were determined; a dose that caused adverse clinical signs to 5% of animals (SD05) and a higher one that causes signs of toxicity at 95% of animals (SD95). Functional observational battery (FOB) and bodyweight gain were recorded and the animals were killed 24 h and 48 h after treatment and blood was sampled by intra-cardiac puncture for clinical chemistry and hematology analysis in He-Li tubes. Necropsy was carried out and the major organs were weighed and preserved in formalin.

2.17. Microsomal fraction stability experimental procedure

Pooled mouse and human liver microsomes were purchased from Xenotech. Microsomes (final protein concentration 0.5 mg/ml, 5 mM MgCl2 ), and test compound (final substrate concentration 0.5 μM; final DMSO concentration 0.5%) in 0.1 M phosphate buffer pH 7.4 was pre-incubated at 37 °C prior to the addition of NADPH (final concentration 1 mM) to initiate the reaction. The final incubation volume was 600 μl. Control samples were included for each compound tested where 0.1 M phosphate buffer pH 7.4 was added instead of NADPH (minus NADPH). Midazolam was included as control in every experiment. Each compound was incubated for 30 min and samples (90 μl) were taken at 0, 5, 10, 20, and 30 min. The minus NADPH control was sampled at 0 and 30 min only. The reactions were stopped by the addition of 200 μl of acetonitrile:methanol (3:1) containing an internal standard, followed by centrifugation at 3700 rpm for 15 min at 4 °C to precipitate the protein. Quantitative analysis was performed using specific LC-MS/MS conditions. Data analysis: from a plot of ln peak area ratio (compound peak area/internal standard peak area) against time, the gradient of the line was determined. Subsequently, half-life and intrinsic clearance were calculated using the equations below:

Failed to parse (MathML with SVG or PNG fallback (recommended for modern browsers and accessibility tools): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://test.scipedia.com:8081/localhost/v1/":): \mbox{Elimination rate constant}\left(k\right)=\left(-\right.

Failed to parse (MathML with SVG or PNG fallback (recommended for modern browsers and accessibility tools): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://test.scipedia.com:8081/localhost/v1/":): \left. \mbox{gradient}\right)

Failed to parse (MathML with SVG or PNG fallback (recommended for modern browsers and accessibility tools): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://test.scipedia.com:8081/localhost/v1/":): \mbox{Half}\quad \mbox{life}\left(t_{1/2}\right)\left(min\right)=

Failed to parse (MathML with SVG or PNG fallback (recommended for modern browsers and accessibility tools): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://test.scipedia.com:8081/localhost/v1/":): \frac{0.693}{k}

Failed to parse (MathML with SVG or PNG fallback (recommended for modern browsers and accessibility tools): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://test.scipedia.com:8081/localhost/v1/":): \mbox{Intrinsic}\quad \mbox{clearance}\left(\mbox{CLint}\right)\left(ml/min/g\quad \mbox{tissue}\right)=

Failed to parse (MathML with SVG or PNG fallback (recommended for modern browsers and accessibility tools): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://test.scipedia.com:8081/localhost/v1/":): \frac{V\times 0.693}{t_{1/2}}

where V  = incubation volume ml/g microsomal protein and constant used for mg microsomal protein/g liver is 52.5.

2.18. Killing kinetics assay

Bacteria were grown at 37 °C in 7H9 broth, 10% ADC, and 0.025% Tyloxapol to mid-exponential phase and then diluted in 10 ml fresh Middlebrook 7H9 to an 5 × 105 CFUs/ml. Incubation was continued after the addition of compounds at 20xMIC. At specified time points, aliquots of cultures were withdrawn, serially diluted in 7H9 broth 0.025% Tyloxapol and plated on solid culture medium. Plates were then incubated at 37 °C and CFU were counted after 3 to 4 weeks.

2.19. Time-lapse imaging

Time-lapse imaging of the GFP expressing MTB strain growing in the custom-made microfluidic device was carried out as described before (Wakamoto et al., 2013 ). Briefly, cells were grown in 7H9 medium at 37 °C to mid-log phase and were seeded into the microfluidic device for imaging. Images were acquired at 1 h intervals on the phase and FITC (Excitation 490/20; Emission 528/38) channels using a DeltaVision personalDV imaging system (Applied Precision) equipped with a 100 × objective (Olympus UPLFL 100 × PH, 1.3 NA) and a CoolSnap HQ2 camera. Medium and compound were replenished every 24 h. As an endpoint assay, 1.0 μg/ml propidium iodide was added to the flow medium for 24 h to stain cells with permeabilized cell envelopes and imaging done on the red channel (Excitation 555/28; Emission 617/73).

Analysis of the time-lapse image stacks was carried out using ImageJ v 1.47a (http://rsb.info.nih.gov/ij/ ). The survival curves depicted in Fig. 4 were generated by tracking cell division and lysis events over the course of the experiment using the “Cell Counter” plugin of ImageJ. Cytolysis was scored visually by abrupt loss of GFP fluorescence and abrupt decrease in phase intensity. Statistic analysis and fitting of data was performed using Prism (GraphPad).

2.20. Mice

Specific Pathogen-free 6- to 8-week-old female C57BL/6j mice (18–20 g) are obtained from Harlan (Harlan Interfauna Iberica, Spain). The experiments were performed at AAALAC-accredited GlaxoSmithKline Laboratory Animal Science animal facilities in Tres Cantos (Madrid, Spain). The mice were kept in air-conditioned facilities with fifteen air changes per hour. Room temperature and relative humidity were 22 ± 3 °C and 40–70%, respectively. The mice were accommodated in groups of up to five individuals in Tecniplast® type IV cages with autoclaved dust free corncob bedding (Panlab, Barcelona, Spain). The mice were maintained under a 12-h light/dark period. Autoclaved tap water and γ-irradiated pelleted diet were provided ad libitum.

2.21. Pharmacokinetic studies

Pharmacokinetic studies were performed in C57BL/6j female mice of 18–20 g weight (n  = 4 mice per time point). Experimental compounds were administered by intravenous route at 0.5 (GSK613 and GSK625) or 4 mg/kg (GSK693) single dose at a volume of 10 ml/kg and by oral gavage at 50 (GSK613 AND 625), 100, 150, or 300 mg/kg single doses (GSK693) at a volume of 20 ml/kg. All mice received treatment in the fed state. Compounds were administered as solution in 1% DMSO, 7.5% PEG400, and 20% Encapsine in saline for intravenous route and as 1% methyl-cellulose suspension for oral route. Whole blood was the compartment chosen for the establishment of compound concentrations: blood samples were taken by cardiac puncture for each mouse (euthanized by CO2) at 5, 15, and 30 min, 1, 1.5, 2, 3, 4, and 8 h (n  = 4 mice per time point) for intravenous route and at 15, 30, and 45 min, 1, 1.5, 2, 3, 4, and 8 h (n  = 4 mice per time point) for oral route. LC-MS was used as the analytical method of choice for the establishment of compound concentration in blood with a sensitivity of LLQ = 1–5 ng/ml in 25 μl blood. The non-compartmental data analysis (NCA) was performed with WinNonlin 5.2 (Pharsight, Certara L.P), and supplementary analysis was performed with GraphPad Prism 5 (GraphPad Software, Inc).

2.22. In vivo acute efficacy assessment

The experimental design has been previously described (Rullas et al., 2010 ). In brief, mice were intratracheally infected with 100.000 CFU/mouse (M. tuberculosis H37Rv). Products were administered for 8 consecutive days starting 1 day after infection. Lungs were harvested 24 h after the last administration. For the chronic assay, mice were infected with 100 CFU/mouse, and the products were administered daily (7 days a week) for 8 consecutive weeks starting 6 weeks after infection. All lung lobes were aseptically removed 24 h after the last administration, homogenized, and frozen. Homogenates were plated in 10% OADC-7H11 medium for 14 days at 37 °C. Homogenates from compound treated mice were incubated for 18 days at 37 °C in plates supplemented with 0.4% (wt, vol) activated charcoal (Sigma Aldrich) to prevent the effect of product carryover. Moxifloxacin (Sequoia Research Products Ltd.) was prepared as solution in 20% Captisol(R)/water).

2.23. In vivo chronic efficacy assessment

Specific pathogen-free, 8- to 10-week-old female C57BL/6j mice were purchased from Harlan Laboratories and were allowed to acclimate for 1 week. In brief, mice were intratracheally with 100 CFU/mouse and the products administered daily (7 days a week) for 4 or 8 consecutive weeks starting 6 weeks after infection. Lungs were harvested 24 h after the last administration. All lung lobes were aseptically removed, homogenized, and frozen. Homogenates were plated in 10% OADC-7H11 medium supplemented with activated charcoal (0.4%) for 18 days at 37 °C. The positive control of isoniazid was assayed at 25 mg/kg, in distilled water.

3. Results

3.1. Biochemical, physicochemical, and ADME characterization of hits GSK613 and GSK625

Several screening campaigns were run against InhA yielding an overall hit rate of 0.63% after quencher removal. The campaign covered a total of 1.9 million compounds unearthing GSK613 and GSK625 as the most attractive representative structures of the thiadiazole series. Both compounds exhibited a single-digit nanomolar activity in the enzyme assay and micromolar in the whole-cell assay and showed selective antibacterial activity against M. tuberculosis . The physicochemical properties and preliminary ADMET profile were completed ( Table 1 ) and used to drive medicinal chemistry efforts.

Table 1. Structure of hit compounds GSK613 and GSK625. Compounds were assessed for activity against purified InhA, M. tuberculosis H37Rv, a panel of Gram-positive and Gram negative bacteria, and HepG2 mammalian cells, ClogP, and DMPK parameters (in vitro and in vivo clearance, volume of distribution at steady state (Vss), half-life (t1/2 ), Tmax, Cmax, and dose normalized exposure (DNAUC) in mice).
Image 1
Image 2
InhA IC50 7 nM 2 nM
Mtb MIC ≤ 1 μM 1 μM
Antibacterial panel ≥ 64 μg/ml ≥ 64 μg/ml
MW 403.9 417.9
ClogP 3.75 4.05
Art. Memb. Permeability 3.4 × 10− 5  cm/s 5.4 × 10− 5  cm/s
Solubility CLND 10 μM 9 μM
HepG2 cytotoxicity Tox 50 > 100 μM > 100 μM
In vitro Cli mouse 11.9 ml/min/g 14.9 ml/min/g
In vitro Cli human 2.9 ml/min/g 2.8 ml/min/g
In vivo pharmacokinetic studies in mice
In vivo Cl (0.5 mg/kg iv) 156.7 ml/min/kg 119.9 ml/min/kg
In vivo Vss (0.5 mg/kg iv) 2.5 L/kg 1.5 L/kg
In vivo t1/2 (0.5 mg/kg iv) 0.3 h 0.2 h
In vivo Tmax (50 mg/kg po) 0.75 h 1 h
In vivo Cmax (50 mg/kg po) 94.3 ng/ml 2383 ng/ml
DNAUC (ng·h/ml per mg/kg) 5 123

N -(1-(2-chloro-6-fluorobenzyl)-1H-pyrazol-3-yl)-5-(1-(3-methyl-1H-pyrazol-1-yl)ethyl)-1,3,4-thiadiazol-2-amine (GSK613) was progressed to enzymatic mode of action studies to discard non-specific enzyme inhibition. GSK613 is a selective (inactive against human FAS), reversible inhibitor in addition to time, enzyme, and solvent independent. Steady-state competition experiments have shown that the hit competes with the fatty acid substrate for binding to the enzyme but is uncompetitive with NADH, consistent with inhibitors binding to a pre-formed enzyme:NADH complex (see Supplementary Fig. 1, Supplementary Table 2).

3.2. Use of InhA overexpressor strain to confirmation whole-cell mode of action

Two Mycobacterium smegmatis mc2 155 and Mycobacterium bovis BCG strains expressing increased levels of InhA protein from M. smegmatis and M. tuberculosis were constructed in order to identify inhibitors whose whole-cell activity is mediated mainly or solely by inhibition of InhA (see Supplementary Fig. 2). A reproducible shift in the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) values higher than or equal to 4-fold in strains overexpressing the target was considered as indicative that antitubercular activity is mainly mediated by InhA inhibition. Thiadiazoles GSK625 and GSK613 met this criterion.

3.3. Structure of the InhA:GSK625 complex

Crystal structures were obtained for InhA in complex with NAD+ and the thiadiazole compound GSK625 at 2.9 Å resolution (see Supplementary Table 1) (PDB ID 5JFO ). The electronic density observed was used for identifying the main scaffold and its disposition and interactions within the active site (Fig. 1 ).


Fig. 1


Fig. 1.

X-Ray structure of InhA-GSK625 complex: Binding mode of GSK625 to the InhA active site. GSK625 (green) interacted with NAD + (gray) and M98 via H-bonds (shown as black dashed lines), with G96, F97, M98, M103, F149, M161, I202, G104, M199, and L207 through hydrophobic and van der Waals interactions. The two residues involved in resistance, G96 and M103, are colored in magenta. Atom coloring is oxygen red, nitrogen blue, sulfur yellow, chlorine green, and fluoride light blue.

GSK625 was observed bound to the hydrophobic substrate-binding pocket of InhA, which was surrounded by residues M199, L207, I215, M103, F149, Y158, A198, and I202 (residue numbering as in reference (Lu et al., 2010  and Rozwarski et al., 1999 )). We were able to crystallize the enzyme:inhibitor complex only in the presence of the cofactor NAD(H), in agreement with the uncompetitive character of these inhibitors relative to NADH (Fig. 1 ). When the structures of the InhA:GSK625 and that of the InhA:NAD+ :C16-fatty acyl substrate analog complex (Rozwarski et al., 1999 ) were compared, it was observed that the aromatic pyrazole ring of the inhibitor occupied the same pocket as the thioester and the trans double bond of the C16-substrate analog, in close proximity to NAD+ , which is in agreement with the competitive behavior of these inhibitors relative to the DDCoA substrate.

The pyrazole ring interacted with NAD+ via π-π stacking (4 Å). In addition, the pyrazole nitrogen H-bonded to the 2′-hydroxyl of the ribose moiety in the cofactor (3.3 Å). The other key interactions identified were the direct H-bonding between (i) the nitrogen of the thiadiazole ring and the amide NH of Met98 and (ii) the nitrogen linking the pyrazole and the thiadiazole rings and the carbonyl oxygen of Met98 (2.9 and 2.5 Å, respectively). Hydrophobic and van der Waals interactions between the inhibitor and the side chains of the active site residues Met161, Phe97, Leu207, Met199, Met103, Gly 104, Met98, Ala198, Gly96, Phe149, Tyr158, and Ile202 dominated the ligand–protein interactions. The halide substituted aryl ring of GSK625 interacted with the main chain Met199, and Gly104, through its halogen atoms, which increased the potency remarkably compared to the analogs without the aryl moiety. Noticeably, the catalytic residue Tyr158 did not make any H-bonds with the inhibitor and participated in ligand binding through van der Waals interactions only (3.9 Å). Thus, GSK625 is a representative of a class of inhibitors which does not need this conserved network of interaction with Tyr158 for potency. Furthermore, in the InhA:NAD+ :GSK625 complex, the side chain of Phe149 adopted the identical position as in InhA:NAD(H) structure.

3.4. The thiadiazole series is bactericidal

To test if the these inhibitors shared the fast killing mode of action of INH, we determined the in vitro killing rates of GSK625 at 20xMIC in growth medium inoculated with approximately 106 bacteria, during 7 days (Fig. 2 ). After the first 2 days of incubation, the thiadiazole behaved similarly to INH, killing > 99% of the initial bacteria. Due to the high frequency of spontaneous resistance to INH, the number of bacteria increases after 4 days of culture in presence of this drug, but not so in cultures treated with GSK625, where the number of colony forming units kept decreasing down to the detection limit.


Fig. 2


Fig. 2.

Killing curve of GSK625. Killing rates of M. tuberculosis , exposed to 20xMIC of GSK625, INH, and linezolid.

3.5. GSK625 generates resistant mutants at lower frequency than INH and mutations map in the InhA active site

The in vitro rate of spontaneous resistance for GSK625 at 20xMIC was 3.7 × 10− 8 mutants/CFU, very similar to the frequency obtained with rifampicin and three orders of magnitude lower than that for isoniazid (Zhang and Yew, 2009 ). This rate is consistent with the presence of a single defined target. GSK625-resistant mutants exhibited a shift in MIC value by at least one order of magnitude and display no cross-resistance with other antitubercular compounds such as INH and rifampicin. Since the compounds bind to the enzyme competitively with DDCoA, it could be expected that mutations in the substrate-binding site could affect the interaction of the thiadiazoles, while leaving isoniazid (INH) and ethionamide (ETH) activity unaffected. The inhA alleles from single colonies of the seventeen mutants were amplified and sequenced. Four different point mutations were found in the coding regions from all mutants, producing a single amino acid change at either of two positions: Gly96 or Met103. These two amino acids map to the active site of the enzyme (see Supplementary Table 3) and have not been reported to be involved in resistance to InhA neither for isoniazid or ethionamide.

In order to link the point mutations in inhA to the resistant phenotype, the enoyl-ACP-reductase from the wild type and the four different point mutants were over-expressed and purified as untagged protein in E. coli . All the mutated enzymes behaved similarly than the wild type and a very good correlation between enzymatic IC50 for inhibition with GSK625 and the MIC values of the source strains was observed (see Supplementary Table 4). For the whole-cell analysis, the complete inhA operon (fabG1 -inhA -hemZ ) from the wild-type H37Rv strain and from the resistant mutants were cloned in a multicopy plasmid and transformed in fast growing M. smegmatis mc2 155 and in M. tuberculosis H37Rv. In all cases, the genetic transformation of the mutant operons conferred resistance to thiadiazoles well above that obtained by expressing the wild type version from the multicopy plasmid (see Supplementary Fig. 3).

3.6. Activity of GSK625 against sensitive and M(X)DR M. tuberculosis clinical isolates

InhA inhibitors, such as INH and ETH, have been in use for decades and resistant MTB strains have emerged without identifiable mutations in inhA or in any other studied gene ( Sandgren et al., 2009 ). It was therefore relevant to test a variety of clinical drug-resistant isolates for the possibility of pre-existing cross-resistance to the thiadiazole class. Two thiadiazole compounds were tested in a first instance against a group of INH-resistant clinical isolates with characterized mutations, either in katG (the most frequent resistant class) or in nucleotide position 15 upstream of the transcription start site for inh A (InhA overexpressor) ( Sandgren et al., 2009  and Vilcheze and Jacobs, 2007 ). The compounds retained full activity against the first group of mutants, while a moderate shift (4–8 times) in MIC was observed against the group of strains overexpressing InhA, as described above for laboratory constructs (Table 2 ).

Table 2. Activity of thiadiazoles (GSK613, GSK625) and controls (kanamycin, InhA and ETH) against M. bovis BCG overexpressing InhA.
Wild type − 15 C/T inhA katG S315T
Compound/strain H37Rv CI1 CI2 CI3 CI4 CI5 CI6 CI7
GSK625 MIC (μM) 1 8 16 8 2 1 2 2
Ratio 1 8 16 8 2 1 2 2
INH MIC (μg/ml) 0.5 3.125 1.6 1.6 50 50 25 200
Ratio 1 6 3 3 100 100 50 400

GSK625 has been tested against recent clinical isolates of M. tuberculosis at two different TB reference centers (National Institute of Health Carlos III, Madrid and the Supranational Reference Laboratory of the Hospital Vall d'Hebron, Barcelona), and two observations were noteworthy. The first one was that the MIC90 obtained with 100 recently isolated MTB stains is 3 μM, showing that the thiadiazole sensitivity of our laboratory H37Rv strain is representative for the majority of MTB strains isolated in Spain, which are therefore sensitive to the compound (see Supplementary Table 5). The second was that GSK625 is active against most resistant isolates present in the sample, with MIC values similar to that of laboratory strain H37Rv independently of the resistance profile of the clinical strains (see Supplementary Table 6).

3.7. Lead optimization summary, lead profile

Despite the interesting in vitro antitubercular profile stated above, the initial hits were affected by a number of compound development liabilities such us physicochemical properties and DMPK profile. Further medicinal chemistry efforts (details to be reported elsewhere) were hence dedicated to the identification of optimized compounds. These efforts led to the identification of the chiral compound GSK693 as a promising lead ( Table 3 ).

Table 3. Structure and properties of optimized lead GSK693. The lead was assessed for activity against M. tuberculosis H37Rv both intra and extracellularly, physicochemical, and ADMET properties.
Image 3
Physchem properties MW 419.6
ClogP 0.71
Art. Memb. Permeability 1.9 ·10− 5  cm/s
Solubility CLND 413 μM
Activity profile InhA IC50 7 nM
Mtb MIC 0.2 μM
Mtb intracell MIC 0.2 μM
Cytochrome P450 profile CYP 3A4 IC50 VR > 50.1 μM
CYP 3A4 IC50 VG 25.1 μM
Cytotoxicity profile HepG2 Cytotoxicity Tox 50 > 50 μM
Cell Health (Memb.; Nucleus; Mitoch. ) > 199.5 μM
Genetic toxicity Ames test Negative
Cardiovascular profile Qpatch IC50 > 50 μM
In vitro metabolic stability Cli mouse 2.1 ml/min/g
Cli human 0.2 ml/min/g
In vivo pharmacokinetic study in mice Cl (4 mg/kg iv) 83 ml/min/kg
Vss (4 mg/kg iv) 2.58 L/kg
t1/2 (4 mg/kg iv) 0.94 h
Tmax (100 mg/kg po) 0.42 h
Cmax (100 mg/kg po) 37,271 ng/ml
DNAUC 935.8 ng·h/ml per mg/kg

GSK693 retained the enzymatic activity of previous GSK613 and GSK625 hits. Additionally, GSK693 displayed equal potency against the M. tuberculosis H37Rv inside and outside of macrophages (0.2 μM). This was accompanied by a good CYP 3A4 inhibition profile. Early safety assessment was carried out, across different enzymatic assays. GSK693 did not show any sign of cytotoxicty and no hERG potassium channel inhibition (Vasilyev et al., 2006 ), suggesting a low risk for general toxicity and cardiotoxicity. Genotoxocity alert was discarded with a full Ames test (McCann et al., 1975 ). The breakthrough in the developability was obtained with the decreased lipophilicity, the enhanced solubility, and the reduced metabolic liabilities whilst simultaneously achieving good mouse pharmacokinetic exposure levels after a single oral administration at different doses (see Supplementary Table 7). Cross-resistance experiments with previously isolated mutants proved that the observed TB activity for the lead compound was target related (data not shown). Additional biological studies were carried out to confirm and gain further insight into the mode of action of GSK693.

3.8. Single-cell analysis of effect of GSK693 on M. tuberculosis

To confirm that the synthesized derivatives retain the antitubercular properties of the original hits, we evaluated the bactericidal activity of GSK693 against MTB at the single-cell level by culturing the bacteria in microfluidic devices and observing their behavior by time-lapse microscopy. MTB expressing GFP was grown in a microfluidic device for 6 days until they formed small microcolonies. The bacteria were then exposed to 5 μM (2.1 μg/ml—25xMIC) GSK693 for 10 days, followed by washout of the drug for 7 days. Exposure to GSK693 induced a rapid growth arrest of individual MTB cells quite similar to the response of MTB when exposed to INH. Interestingly, while in case of INH, the cells continued to divide without elongation for several hours and started to lyse after a lag of several days, in case of GSK693, the cell lysis was more rapid without any significant lag period (see Supplementary Fig. 4). While the total fraction of cells undergoing lysis was comparable between GSK693 (53 ± 20% N  = 32 microcolonies) and INH (42 ± 15%, N  = 41 microcolonies), the bacteriolysis induced by GSK693 was significantly more rapid than INH (P  = 0.011, log-rank Mantel–Cox test). In both cases, after exposure to INH or GSK693, the rate of killing was maintained even after washout of the drug, indicative of strong post-antibiotic effect or long-term inhibition of the target by the compounds. In order to identify cells that did not lyse visibly but whose cell wall was potentially compromised, we stained the remaining intact cells with propidium iodide (PI) as an end point assay. About 22% of the cells still intact after GSK693 exposure were found to be PI-positive and remarkably the remaining 78% of the cells were still able to exclude PI. None of the intact bacteria exhibited regrowth after washout of the drug, possibly suggestive again of long-term target inhibition or possible pushing of the surviving bacterial population into a non-replicative senescent state.

3.9. Confirmation of KatG-independent activity of GSK693

As shown previously in Table 2 , thiadiazole compounds exhibited no change in MIC against INH-resistant clinical isolates carrying mutations in katG . However, since MIC is more of an assay of bacteriostatic activity, we decided to confirm the katG -independent bactericidal activity of GSK693. We compared the killing efficacy of INH vs GSK693 against a panel of three strains differing in the level of KatG expression—(i) a wild-type M. tuberculosis with the native katG locus; (ii) a katG -null mutant of M. tuberculosis , deficient in catalase activity ( Ng et al., 2004 ); and (iii) a katG -overexpressing strain of M. tuberculosis that carries a second copy of MTB katG at the atTB locus. These strains were exposed to 3.6 μM (0.5 μg/ml) INH or 5 μM of GSK693 for 4 days and the fraction of bacteria surviving antibiotic treatment determined by plating. As expected, against INH, the katG -null mutant was resistant, and the katG -overexpressing strain was more sensitive compared to the wild-type strain ( Fig. 3 ). Encouragingly and consistent with our previous observations, the katG -null mutant strain was killed equally well as the wild-type strain by GSK693. This further reinforces the katG -independent nature of bactericidal activity of GSK693.


Fig. 3


Fig. 3.

GSK693 exhibits KatG -independent bactericidal activity. This plot depicts the percent survival of wild-type M. tuberculosis (WT); a katG -null catalase-deficient mutant strain of M. tuberculosis (ΔkatG); and a katG -overexpressing strain of M. tuberculosis (katG-2 ×) after exposure to 3.6 μM INH or 5 μM GSK693 for a period of 4 days. Data shown represents the Mean + SE of three independent replicates.

3.10. In vivo efficacy of GSK693 in the acute and chronic TB murine infection models

Given its desirable and balanced profile, GSK693 fulfilled our requirements to be progressed to tolerability and in vivo efficacy studies in both acute and chronic TB murine infection models. The maximal no lethal dose (MNLD) in mice was found to be higher than 1000 mg/kg. Subsequently, the oral efficacy of GSK693 was evaluated in an acute murine model as previously described (Rullas et al., 2010 ) at doses of 30, 100, and 300 mg/K u.i.d. for 7 days, using moxifloxacin as a positive control at 30 mg/kg. The compound showed a clear dose/response pharmacological effect with this dose range (Fig. 4 a). In mice treated with 100 mg/kg, the bacterial load was reduced 4 log10 colony forming units (CFU) per lung, matching the reduction obtained with 30 mg/kg of moxifloxacin.


Fig. 4


Fig. 4.

(a) Dose–response studies in acute murine model of TB efficacy. Log CFU in mice after oral treatment with different doses of GSK693 (30, 100, and 300 mg/kg) and moxifloxacin at 30 mg/kg. Treatment in all groups resulted in a significant clearance of bacilli compared with the controls (P  < 0.001). (b) Efficacy response of GSK693 in chronic, established murine model of TB infection. Log CFU in mice after oral treatment with GSK693 at 300 mg/kg and INH at 25 mg/kg. Treatment in both groups resulted in a significant clearance of bacilli compared with the controls (P  < 0.001).

The important proof-of-concept in vivo efficacy was obtained by GSK693 in the acute murine TB model. GSK693 was further evaluated in an established model of TB infection at a dose of 300 mg/kg as suspension in 1% methylcellulose. After a 2-month treatment of chronically infected mice, GSK693 (300 mg/kg) and isoniazid (25 mg/kg), showed a clear efficacy (Fig. 4 b), and the differences observed between both groups were not statistically significant.

The bacterial load reduction in both acute and chronic murine models with GSK693 at 300 mg/kg is virtually the same than the one observed with isoniazid at the human equivalent dose.

4. Discussion

Isoniazid (INH) is together with rifampicin the corner stone of the TB treatment. It has been administrated to > 40 million people saving millions of lives. Its outstanding cidal effect rapidly blocks bacterial spread and significantly improves patients conditions after a few weeks of treatment.

On the basis of INH mode of action, it has been proposed that direct inhibitors of the enoyl-ACP-reductase of Mtb can retain the outstanding antitubercular profile of INH overcoming most of the issues associated with the drug, such us drug resistance and toxicological effects. Additionally, compounds inhibiting InhA without requiring activation by KatG could be active under anaerobic conditions (Vilcheze et al., 2011 ), where catalase-mediated activation is suppressed by the lack of oxygen (Karakousis et al., 2008 ).

Following the above-mentioned rational, a biochemical assay based on NADH consumption in the presence of docecenoyl-CoA by purified InhA enzyme has allowed the identification of different direct inhibitors of Mtb enoyl-ACP reductase. All the compounds showing IC50 values in the micromolar range were clustered and tested for antitubercular activity against wild-type and InhA overexpressor strains to identify five chemical series of bona-fide inhibitors (whole-cell activity clearly linked to enzymatic inhibition).

Enzymatic and whole-cell activities will provide the desired efficacy at an acceptable dose, but a drug also needs to have the right physicochemical properties to increase the probability of success (Hann and Keseru, 2012 ). The drug-like chemical properties of the selected InhA inhibitors were evaluated to select thiadiazole series as the family with the best balance between potency and physicochemical properties.

GSK613 and GSK625 are the most attractive representative compounds of the thiadiazole series. Both exhibited a single-digit nanomolar activity in the enzyme assay and micromolar in the whole-cell assay and showed a selective antibacterial activity against M. tuberculosis . The series does not required KatG activation and retain the antitubercular activity against sensitive, MDR, and XDR clinical isolates.

The in vitro frequency of spontaneous resistance is three orders of magnitude better than the one obtained for isoniazid. The four different point mutations identified conferring resistance were found in inhA coding region, producing a single amino acid change at either of two positions: Gly96 or Met103. These two amino acids map to the active site of the enzyme and have not been reported to be involved in resistance to InhA neither for isoniazid or ethionamide.

Like other InhA direct inhibitors, thiadiazoles bind to the enzyme–NADH complex, but in contrast to previously crystallized InhA inhibitors such as pyrrolidine carboxamides (He et al., 2006 ), Genzyme10850, and triclosan (Kuo et al., 2003 ), thiadiazoles do not establish any direct interaction with Tyr158, and unlike the isoniazid-NADH adduct, GSK625 does not cause the flipping of the Phe149 side chain and thus there is no interaction with the isonicotinic acid binding pocket.

Recently, it was proposed that high-affinity slow binding inhibition of InhA is related to the ordering of the substrate-binding loop, brought about by the long residence time of inhibitors on the enzyme (Lu et al., 2010 ). Importantly, in all of the co-crystal structures with thiadiazoles, the substrate-binding loop (residues 197–226) was ordered and well resolved in the crystal structure, as previously seen with high-affinity slow onset FabI inhibitor structures, implying that the compounds may also be slow, tight binding inhibitors, which generally enhances the in vivo activity and increases their potential as antitubercular drugs.

The medicinal chemistry efforts have been focused on the improvement of the physiochemical properties and DMK profile. GSK693 retains all the antitubercular properties shown by the initial hits accompanied by a good cytochrome P450 profile, lack of cardiovacular liabilities, non-mutagenic, reduced lipophilicity, and good solubility which translate to good oral bioavailability. Dosed orally as a 1% methyl-cellulose suspension, the compound has shown a clear antitubercular activity in the acute and chronic mouse models at free compound exposures similar to those obtained with isoniazid.

5. Conclusion

Standard antitubercular treatment consists of a combination of four compounds (isoniazid, rifampicin, ethambutol, and pyrazinamide) during 2 months that eliminate all the fast growing bacteria and 4 additional months of isoniazid and rifampicin that complete patient cure.

The treatment is long, complex, and has important adverse effects, so the lack of adherence is not unusual, leading to suboptimal responses (failure and relapse), emergence of resistance, and continuous spread of the disease. The presence of rapidly bactericidal compounds like isoniazid as part of the combination has a high impact in blocking transmission and improving the health of infected people.

We have demonstrated that a direct inhibitor on InhA can retain the outstanding profile of isoniazid and considering the DMPK parameters of both compounds the antitubercular effect is achieved at similar exposures of free drug proving our initial hypothesis and overcoming resistances mediated by KatG. GSK693 has demonstrated in vivo efficacy comparable to the marketed drug isoniazid without being a pro-drug, thus overcoming most of INH associated liabilities. Besides, its improved property profile should translate into a safer treatment. Overall, this achievement opens the door to the development of a direct inhibitor of the enoyl-ACP reductase (InhA) as an attractive drug candidate for the therapy of Tuberculosis.

Author contributions

MMH and EPH have performed all the target-engagement experiments (whole-cell mode of action tools development, mutant selection, and characterization). DB performed MIC studies. SM has expressed and purified InhA mutated proteins for biochemical experiments. DAG has performed the biochemical experiments to support SAR of thiadiazole series and mutant characterization. EA managed the screening campaign that identified the new series of inhibitors. MSJ and NMC determined the activity of the new compounds against sensitive and resistant clinical isolates. PT and PC performed in vitro and in vivo cytotoxicity studies respectively. AGP, FA, and SH performed the PK bioanalysis under the supervision of SFB. JR performed in vivo studies directed by IAB. JLL performed molecular modeling and data analysis. GG expressed and purified protein for structural experiments, obtaining and analyzing crystallographic data under the supervision of JCS. JCP directed chemistry. LE, SGV, RFM, and LLB synthesized compounds and participate in data analysis and compound designed. ND, FSC, and JDM generated single-cell microscopy data. DB organized and coordinated ORCHID consortium. JFGB, EPH, and AML organized and planned biology studies. AML wrote the manuscript with input from the co-authors.

In memoriam statement

In memoriam of Emilio Alvarez, an example of professionalism, comradeship, and inspiration. His scientific knowledge, advice, and wisdom will be greatly missed.

Funding sources

The research leading to these results has received funding from GlaxoSmithKline R&D the Global Alliance for TB Drug Development, and from the European Unions 7th framework program (FP7-2007-2013) under the Orchid grant agreement no. 261378.

Conflict of interest

All the authors confirm the absence of any conflict of interest.

Appendix A. Supplementary data

Draft García 878975759-mmc doc.gif

Supplementary material

References

  1. Abrahams et al., 2012 K.A. Abrahams, J.A. Cox, V.L. Spivey, N.J. Loman, M.J. Pallen, C. Constantinidou, R. Fernandez, C. Alemparte, M.J. Remuinan, D. Barros, L. Ballell, G.S. Besra; Identification of novel imidazo[1,2-a]pyridine inhibitors targeting M. tuberculosis QcrB; PLoS One, 7 (2012), p. e52951
  2. Adams et al., 2010 P.D. Adams, P.V. Afonine, G. Bunkoczi, V.B. Chen, I.W. Davis, N. Echols, J.J. Headd, L.W. Hung, G.J. Kapral, R.W. Grosse-Kunstleve, A.J. McCoy, N.W. Moriarty, R. Oeffner, R.J. Read, D.C. Richardson, J.S. Richardson, T.C. Terwilliger, P.H. Zwart; PHENIX: a comprehensive python-based system for macromolecular structure solution; Acta Crystallogr. D Biol. Crystallogr., 66 (2010), pp. 213–221
  3. Ainsa et al., 1996 J.A. Ainsa, C. Martin, M. Cabeza, F. De la Cruz, M.V. Mendiola; Construction of a family of Mycobacterium /Escherichia coli shuttle vectors derived from pAL5000 and pACYC184: their use for cloning an antibiotic-resistance gene from Mycobacterium fortuitum  ; Gene, 176 (1996), pp. 23–26
  4. Andries et al., 2005 K. Andries, P. Verhasselt, J. Guillemont, H.W. Gohlmann, J.M. Neefs, H. Winkler, G.J. Van, P. Timmerman, M. Zhu, E. Lee, P. Williams, C.D. de, E. Huitric, S. Hoffner, E. Cambau, C. Truffot-Pernot, N. Lounis, V. Jarlier; A diarylquinoline drug active on the ATP synthase of Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Science, 307 (2005), pp. 223–227
  5. Ballell et al., 2013 L. Ballell, R.H. Bates, R.J. Young, D. Alvarez-Gomez, E. Alvarez-Ruiz, V. Barroso, D. Blanco, B. Crespo, J. Escribano, R. Gonzalez, S. Lozano, S. Huss, A. Santos-Villarejo, J.J. Martin-Plaza, A. Mendoza, M.J. Rebollo-Lopez, M. Remuinan-Blanco, J.L. Lavandera, E. Perez-Herran, F.J. Gamo-Benito, J.F. Garcia-Bustos, D. Barros, J.P. Castro, N. Cammack; Fueling open-source drug discovery: 177 small-molecule leads against tuberculosis; ChemMedChem, 8 (2013), pp. 313–321
  6. Blanco-Ruano et al., 2015 D. Blanco-Ruano, D.M. Roberts, R. Gonzalez-Del-Rio, D. Alvarez, M.J. Rebollo, E. Perez-Herran, A. Mendoza; Antimicrobial susceptibility testing for Mycobacterium sp  ; T. Parish, D.M. Roberts (Eds.), Mycobacteria Protocols, Springer, Hatfield, Hertfordshier, AL10 9AB, UK (2015), pp. 257–268
  7. Castro-Pichel et al., 2012 Castro-Pichel, J., Fernandez-Menendez, R., Fernandez-Velando, E. P., Gonzalez-Del-Valle, S., and Mallo-Rubio, A. 2012 3-Amino-pyrazole derivatives useful against tuberculosis. PCT/EP2011/067705[WO 2012/049161 A1]. 19–4-2012. Ref Type: Patent.
  8. Crouch et al., 1993 S.P. Crouch, R. Kozlowski, K.J. Slater, J. Fletcher; The use of ATP bioluminescence as a measure of cell proliferation and cytotoxicity; J. Immunol. Methods, 160 (1993), pp. 81–88
  9. Encinas et al., 2014 L. Encinas, H. O'Keefe, M. Neu, M.J. Remuinan, A.M. Patel, A. Guardia, C.P. Davie, N. Perez-Macias, H. Yang, M.A. Convery, J.A. Messer, E. Perez-Herran, P.A. Centrella, D. Alvarez-Gomez, M.A. Clark, S. Huss, G.K. O'Donovan, F. Ortega-Muro, W. McDowell, P. Castaneda, C.C. Arico-Muendel, S. Pajk, J. Rullas, I. Angulo-Barturen, E. Alvarez-Ruiz, A. Mendoza-Losana, P.L. Ballell, J. Castro-Pichel, G. Evindar; Encoded library technology as a source of hits for the discovery and lead optimization of a potent and selective class of bactericidal direct inhibitors of Mycobacterium tuberculosis InhA  ; J. Med. Chem., 57 (2014), pp. 1276–1288
  10. Goude et al., 2015 R. Goude, D.M. Roberts, T. Parish; Electroporation of Mycobacteria; T. Parish, D.M. Roberts (Eds.), Mycobacteria Protocols, Springer, Hatfield, Hertfordshier, AL10 9AB, UK (2015), pp. 117–130
  11. Green and Sambrook, 2012 M.R. Green, J. Sambrook; Molecular cloning: a laboratory manual; Cold Soring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y. (2012)
  12. Hann and Keseru, 2012 M.M. Hann, G.M. Keseru; Finding the sweet spot: the role of nature and nurture in medicinal chemistry; Nat. Rev. Drug Discov., 11 (2012), pp. 355–365
  13. Hartkoorn et al., 2012 R.C. Hartkoorn, C. Sala, J. Neres, F. Pojer, S. Magnet, R. Mukherjee, S. Uplekar, S. Boy-Rottger, K.H. Altmann, S.T. Cole; Towards a new tuberculosis drug: pyridomycin—natures isoniazid; EMBO Mol. Med., 4 (2012), pp. 1032–1042
  14. Hazbon et al., 2006 M.H. Hazbon, M. Brimacombe, d.V. Bobadilla, M. Cavatore, M.I. Guerrero, M. Varma-Basil, H. Billman-Jacobe, C. Lavender, J. Fyfe, L. Garcia-Garcia, C.I. Leon, M. Bose, F. Chaves, M. Murray, K.D. Eisenach, J. Sifuentes-Osornio, M.D. Cave, L.A. Ponce de, D. Alland; Population genetics study of isoniazid resistance mutations and evolution of multidrug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Antimicrob. Agents Chemother., 50 (2006), pp. 2640–2649
  15. He et al., 2006 X. He, A. Alian, R. Stroud, P.R. Ortiz de Montellano; Pyrrolidine carboxamides as a novel class of inhibitors of enoyl acyl carrier protein reductase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis; J. Med. Chem., 49 (2006), pp. 6308–6323
  16. Kajbaf et al., 2011 M. Kajbaf, R. Longhi, D. Montanari, F. Vinco, M. Rigo, S. Fontana, K.D. Read; A comparative study of the CYP450 inhibition potential of marketed drugs using two fluorescence based assay platforms routinely used in the pharmaceutical industry; Drug Metab. Lett., 5 (2011), pp. 30–39
  17. Karakousis et al., 2008 P.C. Karakousis, E.P. Williams, W.R. Bishai; Altered expression of isoniazid-regulated genes in drug-treated dormant Mycobacterium tuberculosis; J. Antimicrob. Chemother., 61 (2008), pp. 323–331
  18. Kohanski et al., 2010 M.A. Kohanski, D.J. Dwyer, J.J. Collins; How antibiotics kill bacteria: from targets to networks; Nat. Rev. Microbiol., 8 (2010), pp. 423–435
  19. Kuo et al., 2003 M.R. Kuo, H.R. Morbidoni, D. Alland, S.F. Sneddon, B.B. Gourlie, M.M. Staveski, M. Leonard, J.S. Gregory, A.D. Janjigian, C. Yee, J.M. Musser, B. Kreiswirth, H. Iwamoto, R. Perozzo, W.R. Jacobs Jr., J.C. Sacchettini, D.A. Fidock; Targeting tuberculosis and malaria through inhibition of Enoyl reductase: compound activity and structural data; J. Biol. Chem., 278 (2003), pp. 20851–20859
  20. Laemmli, 1970 U.K. Laemmli; Cleavage of structural proteins during the assembly of the head of bacteriophage T4; Nature, 227 (1970), pp. 680–685
  21. Lechartier et al., 2014 B. Lechartier, J. Rybniker, A. Zumla, S.T. Cole; Tuberculosis drug discovery in the post-post-genomic era; EMBO Mol. Med. (2014)
  22. Lu et al., 2010 X.Y. Lu, Q.D. You, Y.D. Chen; Recent progress in the identification and development of InhA direct inhibitors of Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Mini-Rev. Med. Chem., 10 (2010), pp. 181–192
  23. Mak et al., 2012 P.A. Mak, S.P. Rao, T.M. Ping, X. Lin, J. Chyba, J. Tay, S.H. Ng, B.H. Tan, J. Cherian, J. Duraiswamy, P. Bifani, V. Lim, B.H. Lee, M.N. Ling, D. Beer, P. Thayalan, K. Kuhen, A. Chatterjee, F. Supek, R. Glynne, J. Zheng, H.I. Boshoff, C.E. Barry III, T. Dick, K. Pethe, L.R. Camacho; A high-throughput screen to identify inhibitors of ATP homeostasis in non-replicating Mycobacterium tuberculosis; ACS Chem. Biol., 7 (2012), pp. 1190–1197
  24. Makarov et al., 2009 V. Makarov, G. Manina, K. Mikusova, U. Mollmann, O. Ryabova, B. Saint-Joanis, N. Dhar, M.R. Pasca, S. Buroni, A.P. Lucarelli, A. Milano, R.E. De, M. Belanova, A. Bobovska, P. Dianiskova, J. Kordulakova, C. Sala, E. Fullam, P. Schneider, J.D. McKinney, P. Brodin, T. Christophe, S. Waddell, P. Butcher, J. Albrethsen, I. Rosenkrands, R. Brosch, V. Nandi, S. Bharath, S. Gaonkar, R.K. Shandil, V. Balasubramanian, T. Balganesh, S. Tyagi, J. Grosset, G. Riccardi, S.T. Cole; Benzothiazinones kill Mycobacterium tuberculosis by blocking arabinan synthesis  ; Science, 324 (2009), pp. 801–804
  25. Manjunatha et al., 2015 U.H. Manjunatha, S.R. SP, R.R. Kondreddi, C.G. Noble, L.R. Camacho, B.H. Tan, S.H. Ng, P.S. Ng, N.L. Ma, S.B. Lakshminarayana, M. Herve, S.W. Barnes, W. Yu, K. Kuhen, F. Blasco, D. Beer, J.R. Walker, P.J. Tonge, R. Glynne, P.W. Smith, T.T. Diagana; Direct inhibitors of InhA are active against Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Sci. Transl. Med., 7 (2015), p. 269ra3
  26. McCann et al., 1975 J. McCann, E. Choi, E. Yamasaki, B.N. Ames; Detection of carcinogens as mutagens in the Salmonella/microsome test: assay of 300 chemicals; Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A., 72 (1975), pp. 5135–5139
  27. Ng et al., 2004 V.H. Ng, J.S. Cox, A.O. Sousa, J.D. MacMicking, J.D. McKinney; Role of KatG catalase-peroxidase in mycobacterial pathogenesis: countering the phagocyte oxidative burst; Mol. Microbiol., 52 (2004), pp. 1291–1302
  28. Otwinowski and Minor, 1997 Z. Otwinowski, W. Minor; Processing of x-ray diffraction data collected in oscillation mode; J.C.W. Carter, R.M. Sweet (Eds.), Methods in Enzymology, Academic Press, New York (1997)
  29. Pan and Tonge, 2012 P. Pan, P.J. Tonge; Targeting InhA, the FASII enoyl-ACP reductase: SAR studies on novel inhibitor scaffolds; Curr. Top. Med. Chem., 12 (2012), pp. 672–693
  30. Parish et al., 1997 T. Parish, E. Mahenthiralingam, P. Draper, E.O. Davis, M.J. Colston; Regulation of the inducible acetamidase gene of Mycobacterium smegmatis; Microbiology, 143 (Pt 7) (1997), pp. 2267–2276
  31. Payne et al., 2007 D.J. Payne, M.N. Gwynn, D.J. Holmes, D.L. Pompliano; Drugs for bad bugs: confronting the challenges of antibacterial discovery; Nat. Rev. Drug Discov., 6 (2007), pp. 29–40
  32. Pethe et al., 2010 K. Pethe, P.C. Sequeira, S. Agarwalla, K. Rhee, K. Kuhen, W.Y. Phong, V. Patel, D. Beer, J.R. Walker, J. Duraiswamy, J. Jiricek, T.H. Keller, A. Chatterjee, M.P. Tan, M. Ujjini, S.P. Rao, L. Camacho, P. Bifani, P.A. Mak, I. Ma, S.W. Barnes, Z. Chen, D. Plouffe, P. Thayalan, S.H. Ng, M. Au, B.H. Lee, B.H. Tan, S. Ravindran, M. Nanjundappa, X. Lin, A. Goh, S.B. Lakshminarayana, C. Shoen, M. Cynamon, B. Kreiswirth, V. Dartois, E.C. Peters, R. Glynne, S. Brenner, T. Dick; A chemical genetic screen in Mycobacterium tuberculosis identifies carbon-source-dependent growth inhibitors devoid of in vivo efficacy  ; Nat. Commun., 1 (2010), p. 57
  33. Remuinan et al., 2013 M.J. Remuinan, E. Perez-Herran, J. Rullas, C. Alemparte, M. Martinez-Hoyos, D.J. Dow, J. Afari, N. Mehta, J. Esquivias, E. Jimenez, F. Ortega-Muro, M.T. Fraile-Gabaldon, V.L. Spivey, N.J. Loman, M.J. Pallen, C. Constantinidou, D.J. Minick, M. Cacho, M.J. Rebollo-Lopez, C. Gonzalez, V. Sousa, I. Angulo-Barturen, A. Mendoza-Losana, D. Barros, G.S. Besra, L. Ballell, N. Cammack; Tetrahydropyrazolo[1.5-a]pyrimidine-3-carboxamide and N -benzyl-6′,7′-dihydrospiro[piperidine-4.4′-thieno[3.2-c]pyran] analogues with bactericidal efficacy against Mycobacterium tuberculosis targeting MmpL3  ; PLoS ONE, 8 (2013), p. e60933
  34. Rozwarski et al., 1999 D.A. Rozwarski, C. Vilcheze, M. Sugantino, R. Bittman, J.C. Sacchettini; Crystal structure of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis enoyl-ACP reductase, InhA, in complex with NAD + and a C16 fatty acyl substrate  ; J. Biol. Chem., 274 (1999), pp. 15582–15589
  35. Rullas et al., 2010 J. Rullas, J.I. Garcia, M. Beltran, P.J. Cardona, N. Caceres, J.F. Garcia-Bustos, I. Angulo-Barturen; Fast standardized therapeutic-efficacy assay for drug discovery against tuberculosis; Antimicrob. Agents Chemother., 54 (2010), pp. 2262–2264
  36. Sandgren et al., 2009 A. Sandgren, M. Strong, P. Muthukrishnan, B.K. Weiner, G.M. Church, M.B. Murray; Tuberculosis drug resistance mutation database; PLoS Med., 6 (2009), p. e2
  37. Seifert et al., 2015 M. Seifert, D. Catanzaro, A. Catanzaro, T.C. Rodwell; Genetic mutations associated with isoniazid resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis : a systematic review  ; PLoS ONE, 10 (2015), p. e0119628
  38. Shirude et al., 2013 P.S. Shirude, P. Madhavapeddi, M. Naik, K. Murugan, V. Shinde, R. Nandishaiah, J. Bhat, A. Kumar, S. Hameed, G. Holdgate, G. Davies, H. McMiken, N. Hegde, A. Ambady, J. Venkatraman, M. Panda, B. Bandodkar, V.K. Sambandamurthy, J.A. Read; Methyl-thiazoles: a novel mode of inhibition with the potential to develop novel inhibitors targeting InhA in Mycobacterium tuberculosis; J. Med. Chem., 56 (2013), pp. 8533–8542
  39. Sink et al., 2015 R. Sink, I. Sosic, M. Zivec, R. Fernandez-Menendez, S. Turk, S. Pajk, D. Alvarez-Gomez, E.M. Lopez-Roman, C. Gonzales-Cortez, J. Rullas-Triconado, I. Angulo-Barturen, D. Barros, L. Ballell-Pages, R.J. Young, L. Encinas, S. Gobec; Design, synthesis, and evaluation of new thiadiazole-based direct inhibitors of enoyl acyl carrier protein reductase (InhA) for the treatment of tuberculosis; J. Med. Chem., 58 (2015), pp. 613–624
  40. Snapper et al., 1990 S.B. Snapper, R.E. Melton, S. Mustafa, T. Kieser, W.R. Jacobs Jr.; Isolation and characterization of efficient plasmid transformation mutants of Mycobacterium smegmatis; Mol. Microbiol., 4 (1990), pp. 1911–1919
  41. Thakare et al., 2015 R. Thakare, I. Soni, A. Dasgupta, S. Chopra; Delamanid for the treatment of pulmonary multidrug-resistant tuberculosis; Drugs Today (Barc.), 51 (2015), pp. 117–123
  42. Vasilyev et al., 2006 D. Vasilyev, T. Merrill, A. Iwanow, J. Dunlop, M. Bowlby; A novel method for patch-clamp automation; Pflugers Arch., 452 (2006), pp. 240–247
  43. Vazquez et al., 2006 M.J. Vazquez, S. Ashman, F. Ramon, D. Calvo, A. Bardera, J.J. Martin, M. Rudiger, D. Tew, J.M. Dominguez; Utilization of substrate-induced quenching for screening targets promoting NADH and NADPH consumption; J. Biomol. Screen., 11 (2006), pp. 75–81
  44. Vilcheze and Jacobs, 2007 C. Vilcheze, W.R. Jacobs Jr.; The mechanism of isoniazid killing: clarity through the scope of genetics; Annu. Rev. Microbiol., 61 (2007), pp. 35–50
  45. Vilcheze et al., 2011 C. Vilcheze, A.D. Baughn, J. Tufariello, L.W. Leung, M. Kuo, C.F. Basler, D. Alland, J.C. Sacchettini, J.S. Freundlich, W.R. Jacobs Jr.; Novel inhibitors of InhA efficiently kill Mycobacterium tuberculosis under aerobic and anaerobic conditions  ; Antimicrob. Agents Chemother., 55 (2011), pp. 3889–3898
  46. Wakamoto et al., 2013 Y. Wakamoto, N. Dhar, R. Chait, K. Schneider, F. Signorino-Gelo, S. Leibler, J.D. McKinney; Dynamic persistence of antibiotic-stressed mycobacteria; Science, 339 (2013), pp. 91–95
  47. Wikler, 2009 M.A. Wikler; Methods for dilution antimicrobial susceptibility tests for bacteria that grow aerobically: approved standard; National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards, 2009 (2009)
  48. Zhang and Yew, 2009 Y. Zhang, W.W. Yew; Mechanisms of drug resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Int. J. Tuberc. Lung Dis., 13 (2009), pp. 1320–1330
  49. Zhang et al., 1999 J.H. Zhang, T.D. Chung, K.R. Oldenburg; A simple statistical parameter for use in evaluation and validation of high throughput screening assays; J. Biomol. Screen., 4 (1999), pp. 67–73
  50. Zumla et al., 2013 A. Zumla, A. George, V. Sharma, N. Herbert, Baroness Masham of Ilton; WHOs 2013 global report on tuberculosis: successes, threats, and opportunities; Lancet, 382 (2013), pp. 1765–1767
Back to Top

Document information

Published on 06/04/17

Licence: Other

Document Score

0

Views 0
Recommendations 0

Share this document

claim authorship

Are you one of the authors of this document?