4.5 Article

Intrabacterial Metabolism Obscures the Successful Prediction of an InhA Inhibitor of Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Journal

ACS INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 5, Issue 12, Pages 2148-2163

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsinfecdis.9b00295

Keywords

Bayesian; docking; InhA; tuberculosis; intrabacterial; metabolism

Funding

  1. NIH [DP20D00845901S1, R44TR000942]
  2. IBM International Foundation

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Tuberculosis, caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tuberculosis), kills 1.6 million people annually. To bridge the gap between structure- and cell-based drug discovery strategies, we are pioneering a computer-aided discovery paradigm that merges structure-based virtual screening with ligand-based, machine learning methods trained with cell-based data. This approach successfully identified N-(3-methoxyphenyl)-7-nitrobenzo[c][1,2,5]oxadiazol-4-amine (JSF-2164) as an inhibitor of purified InhA with whole-cell efficacy versus in vitro cultured M. tuberculosis. When the intrabacterial drug metabolism (IBDM) platform was leveraged, mechanistic studies demonstrated that JSF-2164 underwent a rapid F420H2-dependent biotransformation within M. tuberculosis to afford intrabacterial nitric oxide and two amines, identified as JSF-3616 and JSF-3617. Thus, metabolism of JSF-2164 obscured the InhA inhibition phenotype within cultured M. tuberculosis. This study demonstrates a new docking/Bayesian computational strategy to combine cell- and target-based drug screening and the need to probe intrabacterial metabolism when clarifying the antitubercular mechanism of action.

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