4.8 Article

A synthetic antibiotic class overcoming bacterial multidrug resistance

期刊

NATURE
卷 599, 期 7885, 页码 507-+

出版社

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-04045-6

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资金

  1. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship [DGE1144152]
  2. National Science Scholarship (PhD) by the Agency for Science, Technology and Research, Singapore
  3. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [TE1311-1-1]
  4. National Institute of General Medical Sciences from the National Institutes of Health [P30-GM124165]
  5. NIH-ORIP HEI grant [S10-OD021527]
  6. DOE Office of Science by Argonne National Laboratory [DE-AC02-06CH11357]
  7. DOE Office of Science
  8. Coronavirus CARES Act
  9. Illinois State startup funds
  10. National Institutes of Health [R21-AI137584, R01-GM132302, R35GM127134]
  11. LEO Foundation [LF18006]
  12. Blavatnik Biomedical Accelerator at Harvard University

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The lack of new medicines effective against antibiotic-resistant bacteria is a growing concern in global public health. The traditional semisynthesis method for finding new antibiotics is inadequate in combating rapidly evolving resistance threats, while fully synthetic routes designed properly can address this issue. Through structure-guided design and component-based synthesis, a new antibiotic named iboxamycin has been developed with exceptional potency and spectrum of activity against various bacteria.
The dearth of new medicines effective against antibiotic-resistant bacteria presents a growing global public health concern(1). For more than five decades, the search for new antibiotics has relied heavily on the chemical modification of natural products (semisynthesis), a method ill-equipped to combat rapidly evolving resistance threats. Semisynthetic modifications are typically of limited scope within polyfunctional antibiotics, usually increase molecular weight, and seldom permit modifications of the underlying scaffold. When properly designed, fully synthetic routes can easily address these shortcomings(2). Here we report the structure-guided design and component-based synthesis of a rigid oxepanoproline scaffold which, when linked to the aminooctose residue of clindamycin, produces an antibiotic of exceptional potency and spectrum of activity, which we name iboxamycin. Iboxamycin is effective against ESKAPE pathogens including strains expressing Erm and Cfr ribosomal RNA methyltransferase enzymes, products of genes that confer resistance to all clinically relevant antibiotics targeting the large ribosomal subunit, namely macrolides, lincosamides, phenicols, oxazolidinones, pleuromutilins and streptogramins. X-ray crystallographic studies of iboxamycin in complex with the native bacterial ribosome, as well as with the Erm-methylated ribosome, uncover the structural basis for this enhanced activity, including a displacement of the m(2)(6)A2058 nucleotide upon antibiotic binding. Iboxamycin is orally bioavailable, safe and effective in treating both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacterial infections in mice, attesting to the capacity for chemical synthesis to provide new antibiotics in an era of increasing resistance.

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