posted on 2015-04-10, 00:00authored byMichael W. Mullowney, Chang Hwa Hwang, Andrew
G. Newsome, Xiaomei Wei, Urszula Tanouye, Baojie Wan, Skylar Carlson, Nanthida Joy Barranis, Eoghainín Ó hAinmhire, Wei-Lun Chen, Kalyanaraman Krishnamoorthy, John White, Rachel Blair, Hyunwoo Lee, Joanna E. Burdette, Pradipsinh
K. Rathod, Tanya Parish, Sanghyun Cho, Scott G. Franzblau, Brian T. Murphy
Multidrug- and extensively drug-resistant
strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis are resistant to first- and second-line drug regimens and resulted
in 210,000 fatalities in 2013. In the current study, we screened a
library of aquatic bacterial natural product fractions for their ability
to inhibit this pathogen. A fraction from a Lake Michigan bacterium
exhibited significant inhibitory activity, from which we characterized
novel diazaquinomycins H and J. This antibiotic class displayed an
in vitro activity profile similar or superior to clinically used anti-tuberculosis
agents and maintained this potency against a panel of drug-resistant M. tuberculosis strains. Importantly, these are among the
only freshwater-derived actinomycete bacterial metabolites described
to date. Further in vitro profiling against a broad panel of bacteria
indicated that this antibiotic class selectively targets M.
tuberculosis. Additionally, in the case of this pathogen
we present evidence counter to previous reports that claim the diazaquinomycins
target thymidylate synthase in Gram-positive bacteria. Thus, we establish
freshwater environments as potential sources for novel antibiotic
leads and present the diazaquinomycins as potent and selective inhibitors
of M. tuberculosis.