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Exploiting the Carboxylate-Binding Pocket of β‑Lactamase Enzymes Using a Focused DNA-Encoded Chemical Library

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posted on 2023-12-20, 18:14 authored by Suhyeorn Park, Jiayi Fan, Srinivas Chamakuri, Murugesan Palaniappan, Kiran Sharma, Xuan Qin, Jian Wang, Zhi Tan, Allison Judge, Liya Hu, Banumathi Sankaran, Feng Li, B. V. Venkataram Prasad, Martin M. Matzuk, Timothy Palzkill
β-Lactamase enzymes hydrolyze and thereby provide bacterial resistance to the important β-lactam class of antibiotics. The OXA-48 and NDM-1 β-lactamases cause resistance to the last-resort β-lactams, carbapenems, leading to a serious public health threat. Here, we utilized DNA-encoded chemical library (DECL) technology to discover novel β-lactamase inhibitors. We exploited the β-lactamase enzyme–substrate binding interactions and created a DECL targeting the carboxylate-binding pocket present in all β-lactamases. A library of 106 compounds, each containing a carboxylic acid or a tetrazole as an enzyme recognition element, was designed, constructed, and used to identify OXA-48 and NDM-1 inhibitors with micromolar to nanomolar potency. Further optimization led to NDM-1 inhibitors with increased potencies and biological activities. This work demonstrates that the carboxylate-binding pocket-targeting DECL, designed based on substrate binding information, aids in inhibitor identification and led to the discovery of novel non-β-lactam pharmacophores for the development of β-lactamase inhibitors for enzymes of different structural and mechanistic classes.

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