Synthetic EthR inhibitors boost antituberculous activity of ethionamide
Author(s) -
Nicolas Willand,
Bertrand Dirié,
Xavier Carette,
Pablo Bifani,
Amit Singhal,
Matthieu Desroses,
Florence Leroux,
Eve Willery,
Vanessa Mathys,
Rebecca DeprezPoulain,
Guy Delcroix,
Frédéric Frénois,
Marc Aumercier,
Camille Locht,
Vincent Villeret,
Benoît Déprez,
Alain R. Baulard
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
nature medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 19.536
H-Index - 547
eISSN - 1546-170X
pISSN - 1078-8956
DOI - 10.1038/nm.1950
Subject(s) - ethionamide , pharmacology , medicine , mycobacterium tuberculosis , drug , tuberculosis , potency , biology , in vitro , biochemistry , ethambutol , pathology
The side effects associated with tuberculosis therapy bring with them the risk of noncompliance and subsequent drug resistance. Increasing the therapeutic index of antituberculosis drugs should thus improve treatment effectiveness. Several antituberculosis compounds require in situ metabolic activation to become inhibitory. Various thiocarbamide-containing drugs, including ethionamide, are activated by the mycobacterial monooxygenase EthA, the production of which is controlled by the transcriptional repressor EthR. Here we identify drug-like inhibitors of EthR that boost the bioactivation of ethionamide. Compounds designed and screened for their capacity to inhibit EthR-DNA interaction were co-crystallized with EthR. We exploited the three-dimensional structures of the complexes for the synthesis of improved analogs that boosted the ethionamide potency in culture more than tenfold. In Mycobacterium tuberculosis-infected mice, one of these analogs, BDM31343, enabled a substantially reduced dose of ethionamide to lessen the mycobacterial load as efficiently as the conventional higher-dose treatment. This provides proof of concept that inhibiting EthR improves the therapeutic index of thiocarbamide derivatives, which should prompt reconsideration of their use as first-line drugs.
Accelerating Research
Robert Robinson Avenue,
Oxford Science Park, Oxford
OX4 4GP, United Kingdom
Address
John Eccles HouseRobert Robinson Avenue,
Oxford Science Park, Oxford
OX4 4GP, United Kingdom