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Discovery of New and Potent InhA Inhibitors as Antituberculosis Agents: Structure-Based Virtual Screening Validated by Biological Assays and X-ray Crystallography
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Document Title
Discovery of New and Potent InhA Inhibitors as Antituberculosis Agents: Structure-Based Virtual Screening Validated by Biological Assays and X-ray Crystallography
Author
Kamsri P, Hanwarinroj C, Phusi N, Pornprom T, Chayajarus K, Punkvang A, Suttipanta N, Srimanote P, Suttisintong K, Songsiriritthigul C, Saparpakorn P, Hannongbua S, Rattanabunyong S, Seetaha S, Choowongkomon K, Sureram S, Kittakoop P, Hongmanee P, Santanirand P, Chen ZQ, Zhu WL, Blood RA, Takebayashi Y, Hinchliffe P, Mulholland AJ, Spencer J, Pungpo P
Name from Authors Collection
Affiliations
Nakhon Phanom University; Ubon Ratchathani University; Ubon Ratchathani University; Thammasat University; National Science & Technology Development Agency - Thailand; National Nanotechnology Center (NANOTEC); Kasetsart University; Kasetsart University; Chulabhorn Research Institute; Chulabhorn Graduate Institute; Chulabhorn Royal Academy; Mahidol University; Chinese Academy of Sciences; Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica, CAS; University of Bristol; University of Bristol
Type
Article
Source Title
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL INFORMATION AND MODELING
Year
2020
Volume
60
Issue
1
Page
226-234
Open Access
Green Submitted
Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI
10.1021/acs.jcim.9b00918
Format
Abstract
The enoyl-acyl carrier protein reductase InhA of Mycobacterium tuberculosis is an attractive, validated target for antituberculosis drug development. Moreover, direct inhibitors of InhA remain effective against InhA variants with mutations associated with isoniazid resistance, offering the potential for activity against MDR isolates. Here, structure-based virtual screening supported by biological assays was applied to identify novel InhA inhibitors as potential antituberculosis agents. High-speed Glide SP docking was initially performed against two conformations of InhA differing in the orientation of the active site Tyr158. The resulting hits were filtered for drug-likeness based on Lipinski's rule and avoidance of PAINS-like properties and finally subjected to Glide XP docking to improve accuracy. Sixteen compounds were identified and selected for in vitro biological assays, of which two (compounds 1 and 7) showed MIC of 12.5 and 25 mu g/mL against M. tuberculosis H37Rv, respectively. Inhibition assays against purified recombinant InhA determined IC50 values for these compounds of 0.38 and 0.22 mu M, respectively. A crystal structure of the most potent compound, compound 7, bound to InhA revealed the inhibitor to occupy a hydrophobic pocket implicated in binding the aliphatic portions of InhA substrates but distant from the NADH cofactor, i.e., in a site distinct from those occupied by the great majority of known InhA inhibitors. This compound provides an attractive starting template for ligand optimization aimed at discovery of new and effective compounds against M. tuberculosis that act by targeting InhA.
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Funding Sponsor
Thailand Research Fund [RSA5980057]; RGJ Advanced Programme [RAP60K0009]; Thailand Graduate Institute of Science and Technology (TGIST) [SCA-CO-2560-4375TH]; Young Scientist and Technologist Programme (YSTP) [SCA-CO-2561-7260-TH]; Center of Excellence for Innovation in Chemistry (PERCH-CIC); Royal Golden Jubilee Ph.D. Program [PHD/0004/2554]; BristolBridge antimicrobial resistance network [EPSRC EP/M027546/1]; CCP-BioSim [EP/M022609/1]; Ubon Ratchathani University; NECTEC; University of Bristol; BBSRC [BB/M012107/1] Funding Source: UKRI; EPSRC [EP/M027546/1, EP/M022609/1] Funding Source: UKRI
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