posted on 2022-06-02, 18:09authored byMichael
D. Sacco, Kyle Defrees, Xiujun Zhang, William Lawless, Emeka Nwanochie, Amelia Balsizer, Sophie E. Darch, Adam R. Renslo, Yu Chen
Enzymes involved in lipid A biosynthesis
are promising antibacterial
drug targets in Gram-negative bacteria. In this study, we use a structure-based
design approach to develop a series of novel tetrazole ligands with
low μM affinity for LpxA, the first enzyme in the lipid A pathway.
Aided by previous structural data, X-ray crystallography, and surface
plasmon resonance bioanalysis, we identify 17 hit compounds. Two of
these hits were subsequently modified to optimize interactions with
three regions of the LpxA active site. This strategy ultimately led
to the discovery of ligand L13, which had a KD of 3.0 μM. The results reveal new chemical scaffolds
as potential LpxA inhibitors, important binding features for ligand
optimization, and protein conformational changes in response to ligand
binding. Specifically, they show that a tetrazole ring is well-accommodated
in a small cleft formed between Met169, the “hydrophobic-ruler”
and His156, both of which demonstrate significant conformational flexibility.
Furthermore, we find that the acyl-chain binding pocket is the most
tractable region of the active site for realizing affinity gains and,
along with a neighboring patch of hydrophobic residues, preferentially
binds aliphatic and aromatic groups. The results presented herein
provide valuable chemical and structural information for future inhibitor
discovery against this important antibacterial drug target.