Ryan_2017_Br.J.Pharmacol_174_2209

Reference

Title : Investigation of the mycobacterial enzyme HsaD as a potential novel target for anti-tubercular agents using a fragment-based drug design approach - Ryan_2017_Br.J.Pharmacol_174_2209
Author(s) : Ryan A , Polycarpou E , Lack NA , Evangelopoulos D , Sieg C , Halman A , Bhakta S , Eleftheriadou O , McHugh TD , Keany S , Lowe ED , Ballet R , Abuhammad A , Jacobs WR, Jr. , Ciulli A , Sim E
Ref : British Journal of Pharmacology , 174 :2209 , 2017
Abstract :

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: With the emergence of extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis, there is a need for new anti-tubercular drugs that work through novel mechanisms of action. The meta cleavage product hydrolase, HsaD, has been demonstrated to be critical for the survival of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in macrophages and is encoded in an operon involved in cholesterol catabolism, which is identical in M. tuberculosis and M. bovis BCG. EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH: We generated a mutant strain of M. bovis BCG with a deletion of hsaD and tested its growth on cholesterol. Using a fragment based approach, over 1000 compounds were screened by a combination of differential scanning fluorimetry, NMR spectroscopy and enzymatic assay with pure recombinant HsaD to identify potential inhibitors. We used enzymological and structural studies to investigate derivatives of the inhibitors identified and to test their effects on growth of M. bovis BCG and M. tuberculosis. KEY RESULTS: The hsaD deleted strain was unable to grow on cholesterol as sole carbon source but did grow on glucose. Of seven chemically distinct 'hits' from the library, two chemical classes of fragments were found to bind in the vicinity of the active site of HsaD by X-ray crystallography. The compounds also inhibited growth of M. tuberculosis on cholesterol. The most potent inhibitor of HsaD was also found to be the best inhibitor of mycobacterial growth on cholesterol-supplemented minimal medium. CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS: We propose that HsaD is a novel therapeutic target, which should be fully exploited in order to design and discover new anti-tubercular drugs. LINKED ARTICLES: This article is part of a themed section on Drug Metabolism and Antibiotic Resistance in Micro-organisms.

PubMedSearch : Ryan_2017_Br.J.Pharmacol_174_2209
PubMedID: 28380256
Gene_locus related to this paper: myctu-Rv3569c

Related information

Inhibitor 6OR-5JZ9
Gene_locus myctu-Rv3569c
Structure 5JZS    5JZB    5JZ9

Citations formats

Ryan A, Polycarpou E, Lack NA, Evangelopoulos D, Sieg C, Halman A, Bhakta S, Eleftheriadou O, McHugh TD, Keany S, Lowe ED, Ballet R, Abuhammad A, Jacobs WR, Jr., Ciulli A, Sim E (2017)
Investigation of the mycobacterial enzyme HsaD as a potential novel target for anti-tubercular agents using a fragment-based drug design approach
British Journal of Pharmacology 174 :2209

Ryan A, Polycarpou E, Lack NA, Evangelopoulos D, Sieg C, Halman A, Bhakta S, Eleftheriadou O, McHugh TD, Keany S, Lowe ED, Ballet R, Abuhammad A, Jacobs WR, Jr., Ciulli A, Sim E (2017)
British Journal of Pharmacology 174 :2209