Discovery of a novel chemotype targeting Mycobacterium tuberculosis cytochrome bd through rapid screening and structural elucidation
van der Velden, T. T.; Halimi, A.; Pols, J. P. V.; Lam, W.-S.; Hacker, S. M.; Jeuken, L. J. C.
Show abstract
Antibiotic resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a pressing global health challenge demanding new therapeutic strategies. The bacterial respiratory chain comprises promising antibacterial targets, with dual inhibition of the terminal oxidases cytochrome bcc:aa3 and cytochrome bd (cyt bd) showing bactericidal activity. While bcc:aa3 inhibitors such as Q203 have advanced clinically, cyt bd remains underexplored due to difficulties in assigning activity of the purified enzyme and structurally resolving the quinol substrate binding site. Here, we report a rapid in vitro screening platform for cyt bd inhibitors by engineering a minimal respiratory system that couples the activity of cyt bd to that of a type 2 NADH dehydrogenase. This coupled assay enables spectroscopic monitoring of NADH oxidation as a proxy for cyt bd activity, allowing rapid screening of over 10,000 compounds. Screening identified WSL017, a fragment with low micromolar potency against both M. tuberculosis and E. coli cyt bd. Kinetic and structural analyses revealed competitive inhibition at the quinol-binding site, providing the first structural insights into cyt bd inhibition by a non-quinone scaffold. WSL017 displayed growth inhibition of M. tuberculosis H37ra, corroborating oxidase inhibition as a promising therapeutic strategy. This work establishes a pipeline for cyt bd inhibitor discovery and highlights new opportunities for structure-guided drug development against cytochrome bd oxidases.
Matching journals
The top 5 journals account for 50% of the predicted probability mass.