Zinc Chelation by a Small-Molecule Adjuvant Potentiates
Meropenem Activity in Vivo against NDM-1-Producing Klebsiella pneumoniae
Posted on 2015-11-13 - 00:00
The
widespread emergence of antibiotic drug resistance has resulted
in a worldwide healthcare crisis. In particular, the extensive use
of β-lactams, a highly effective class of antibiotics, has been
a driver for pervasive β-lactam resistance. Among the most important
resistance determinants are the metallo-β-lactamases (MBL),
which are zinc-requiring enzymes that inactivate nearly all classes
of β-lactams, including the last-resort carbapenem antibiotics.
The urgent need for new compounds targeting MBL resistance mechanisms
has been widely acknowledged; however, the development of certain
types of compoundsnamely metal chelatorsis actively
avoided due to host toxicity concerns. The work herein reports the
identification of a series of zinc-selective spiro-indoline-thiadiazole
analogues that, in vitro, potentiate β-lactam antibiotics against
an MBL-carrying pathogen by withholding zinc availability. This study
demonstrates the ability of one such analogue to inhibit NDM-1 in
vitro and, using a mouse model of infection, shows that combination
treatment of the respective analogue with meropenem results in a significant
decrease in bacterial burden in contrast to animals that received
antibiotic treatment alone. These results support the therapeutic potential
of these chelators in overcoming antibiotic resistance.
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Falconer, Shannon
B.; Reid-Yu, Sarah A.; King, Andrew M.; Gehrke, Sebastian S.; Wang, Wenliang; Britten, James F.; et al. (2016). Zinc Chelation by a Small-Molecule Adjuvant Potentiates
Meropenem Activity in Vivo against NDM-1-Producing Klebsiella pneumoniae. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsinfecdis.5b00033