posted on 2023-11-21, 09:40authored byCarsten
E. Seyfert, Alison V. Müller, Danica J. Walsh, Joy Birkelbach, Andreas M. Kany, Christoph Porten, Biao Yuan, Daniel Krug, Jennifer Herrmann, Thomas C. Marlovits, Anna K. H. Hirsch, Rolf Müller
Biosynthetic engineering of bicyclic darobactins, selectively
sealing
the lateral gate of the outer membrane protein BamA, leads to active
analogues, which are up to 128-fold more potent against Gram-negative
pathogens compared to native counterparts. Because of their excellent
antibacterial activity, darobactins represent one of the most promising
new antibiotic classes of the past decades. Here, we present a series
of structure-driven biosynthetic modifications of our current frontrunner,
darobactin 22 (D22), to investigate modifications at
the understudied positions 2, 4, and 5 for their impact on bioactivity.
Novel darobactins were found to be highly active against critical
pathogens from the WHO priority list. Antibacterial activity data
were corroborated by dissociation constants with BamA. The most active
derivatives D22 and D69 were subjected to
ADMET profiling, showing promising features. We further evaluated D22 and D69 for bioactivity against multidrug-resistant
clinical isolates and found them to have strong activity.