Synthesis, biological evaluation and molecular modeling of urea-containing MraY inhibitors
Author(s) -
Martin Oliver,
Laurent Le Corre,
Domitille ErardPoinsot,
Alessandra Corio,
Léa Madegard,
Michaël Bosco,
Ana Amoroso,
Bernard Joris,
Rodolphe Auger,
Thierry Touzé,
Ahmed Bouhss,
Sandrine CalvetVitale,
Christine GravierPelletier
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
organic and biomolecular chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.923
H-Index - 146
eISSN - 1477-0539
pISSN - 1477-0520
DOI - 10.1039/d1ob00710f
Subject(s) - chemistry , urea , aquifex aeolicus , antibacterial activity , enterococcus faecium , docking (animal) , stereochemistry , escherichia coli , active site , combinatorial chemistry , biochemistry , bacteria , antibiotics , enzyme , medicine , genetics , nursing , biology , gene
The straightforward synthesis of aminoribosyl uridines substituted by a 5'-methylene-urea is described. Their convergent synthesis involves the urea formation from various activated amides and an azidoribosyl uridine substituted at the 5' position by an aminomethyl group. This common intermediate resulted from the diastereoselective glycosylation of a phthalimido uridine derivative with a ribosyl fluoride as a ribosyl donor. The inhibition of the MraY transferase activity by the synthetized 11 urea-containing inhibitors was evaluated and 10 compounds revealed MraY inhibition with IC 50 ranging from 1.9 μM to 16.7 μM. Their antibacterial activity was also evaluated on a panel of Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. Four compounds exhibited a good activity against Gram-positive bacterial pathogens with MIC ranging from 8 to 32 μg mL -1 , including methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and Enterococcus faecium. Interestingly, one compound also revealed antibacterial activity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa with MIC equal to 64 μg mL -1 . Docking experiments predicted two modes of positioning of the active compounds urea chain in different hydrophobic areas (HS2 and HS4) within the MraY active site from Aquifex aeolicus. However, molecular dynamics simulations showed that the urea chain adopts a binding mode similar to that observed in structural model and targets the hydrophobic area HS2.
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