posted on 2025-02-04, 15:07authored byRenier
H. P. van Neer, Patricia K. Dranchak, Mahesh Aitha, Lijun Liu, Emma K. Carlson, Isabella E. Jacobsen, Kevin Battaile, Yuhong Fang, Dingyin Tao, Ganesha Rai, Janak Padia, Scott Lovell, Hiroaki Suga, James Inglese
The secreted Chorismate mutase enzyme of Mycobacterium
tuberculosis (*MtbCM) is an underexplored
potential target for the development of new antitubercular agents
that are increasingly needed as antibiotic resistance rises in prevalence.
As an enzyme suspected to be involved in virulence and host–pathogen
interactions, disruption of its function could circumvent the difficulty
of treating tuberculosis-infected granulomas. Drug development, however,
is limited by novel ligand discovery. Currently, *MtbCM activity is measured by using a low throughput acid/base-mediated
product derivatization absorbance assay. Here, we utilized an RNA-display
affinity selection approach enabled by the Random Peptides Integrated
Discovery (RaPID) system to screen a vast library of macrocyclic peptides
(MCP) for novel *MtbCM ligands. Peptides identified
from the RaPID selection, and analogs thereof identified by analyzing
the selection population dynamics, produced a new class of *MtbCM inhibiting MCPs. Among these were two noteworthy “chorismides”,
whose binding modes were elucidated by X-ray crystallography. Both
were potent inhibitors of the CM enzyme activity. One was identified
as an allosteric binding peptide revealing a novel inhibition approach,
while the other is an active-site binding peptide that when conjugated
to a fluorescent probe allowed for the development of a series of
alternative fluorescence-based ligand-displacement assays that can
be utilized for the assessment of potential *MtbCM
inhibitors.