Design, synthesis and structure-activity relationships of novel macrolones: Hybrids of 2-fluoro 9-oxime ketolides and carbamoyl quinolones with highly improved activity against resistant pathogens

Cong Xuan Ma, Wei Lv, Ya Xin Li, Bing Zhi Fan, Xu Han, Fan Sheng Kong, Jing Chao Tian, Mark Cushman, Jian Hua Liang*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

15 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Constitutively erythromycin-resistant apathogens are more difficult to address than inducibly resistant and efflux-resistant strains. Three series of the 4th generation 2-fluoro 9-oxime erythromycin ketolides were synthesized and evaluated. Incorporation of substituted heteroaryl groups (a - m), in contrast to previously reported the unsubstituted heteroaryl groups, proved to the beneficial for enhancement of the activities of the 9-propgargyl ketolide 8 series and the 9-allyl ketolide 14 series. But these aryl groups (a - m) cannot supply the resulting compounds 8 and 14, unlike corresponding the 6-allyl ketolide 20 series, with activity against constitutively resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae. However, hybrids of macrolides and quinolones (8, 14 and 20, Ar = n - t) exhibited not only high activities against susceptible, inducibly erm-mediated resistant, and efflux-mediated resistant strains, but also significantly improved potencies against constitutively resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae and Streptococcus pyogenes. The capacity was highlighted by introduction of newly designed carbamoyl quinolones (q, r, s and t) rather than commonly seen carboxy quinolones (o and p) as the pharmacophores. Structure-activity relationships and molecular modelling indicated that 8r, 14r and 20q may have different binding sites compared to current erythromycins. Moreover, 8r, 14r and 20q have 2.5–3.6 times prolonged half-life and 2.3- to 2.6-fold longer mean residence time in vivo over telithromycin. These findings pave the way for rational design of novel non-telithromycin macrolides that target new binding sites within bacterial ribosomes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1-20
Number of pages20
JournalEuropean Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
Volume169
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 May 2019

Keywords

  • Ciprofloxacin
  • Erythromycin
  • Erythromycin ribosomal methylation
  • Macrolide efflux
  • Multi-drug resistance
  • Ribosome

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