posted on 2007-07-04, 00:00authored byByron R. Griffith, Candace Krepel, Xun Fu, Sophie Blanchard, Aqeel Ahmed, Charles E. Edmiston, Jon S. Thorson
The neoglycosylation of a methoxyamine-appended vancomycin aglycon with all possible N‘-decanoylglucopyranose and N‘-biphenoylglucopyranose regioisomers led to the production of a focused
set of liponeoglycopeptide variants in good yields and with excellent stereoselectivity. High-throughput
antibacterial assays employing a unique set of vancomycin-resistant Enterococci faecalis and Enterococci
faecium clinical isolates revealed that the nature and regiochemistry of glycosyl lipidation modulated
vancomycin-resistent Enterococci potency. In contrast to prior work with lipoglycopeptides, this study reveals
the glucose C3‘ or C4‘ as the optimal position for neoglycopeptide lipidation. This purely chemical method
for the diversification of the glycolipid portion of lipoglycopeptide antibiotics is simple to perform on a large
scale, requires minimal synthetic effort in sugar donor preparation, and provides access to highly active
antibiotics that are not easily prepared by other state-of-the-art methods.