Despite rapid evolution in the area of microbial natural products chemistry, there is currently no open access database containing all microbially produced natural product structures. Lack of availability of these data is preventing the implementation of new technologies in natural products science. Specifically, development of new computational strategies for compound characterization and identification are being hampered by the lack of a comprehensive database of known compounds against which to compare experimental data. The creation of an open access, community-maintained database of microbial natural product structures would enable the development of new technologies in natural products discovery and improve the interoperability of existing natural products data resources. However, these data are spread unevenly throughout the historical scientific literature, including both journal articles and international patents. These documents have no standard format, are often not digitized as machine readable text, and are not publicly available. Further, none of these documents have associated structure files (e.g., MOL, InChI, or SMILES), instead containing images of structures. This makes extraction and formatting of relevant natural products data a formidable challenge. Using a combination of manual curation and automated data mining approaches we have created a database of microbial natural products (The Natural Products Atlas, ) that includes 24 594 compounds and contains referenced data for structure, compound names, source organisms, isolation references, total syntheses, and instances of structural reassignment. This database is accompanied by an interactive web portal that permits searching by structure, substructure, and physical properties. The Web site also provides mechanisms for visualizing natural products chemical space and dashboards for displaying author and discovery timeline data. These interactive tools offer a powerful knowledge base for natural products discovery with a central interface for structure and property-based searching and presents new viewpoints on structural diversity in natural products. The Natural Products Atlas has been developed under FAIR principles (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable) and is integrated with other emerging natural product databases, including the Minimum Information About a Biosynthetic Gene Cluster (MIBiG) repository, and the Global Natural Products Social Molecular Networking (GNPS) platform. It is designed as a community-supported resource to provide a central repository for known natural product structures from microorganisms and is the first comprehensive, open access resource of this type. It is expected that the Natural Products Atlas will enable the development of new natural products discovery modalities and accelerate the process of structural characterization for complex natural products libraries.
Antibiotics are essential for numerous medical procedures, including the treatment of bacterial infections, but their widespread use has led to the accumulation of resistance, prompting calls for the discovery of antibacterial agents with new targets. A majority of clinically approved antibacterial scaffolds are derived from microbial natural products, but these valuable molecules are not well annotated or organized, limiting the efficacy of modern informatic analyses. Here, we provide a comprehensive resource defining the targets, chemical origins and families of the natural antibacterial collective through a retrobiosynthetic algorithm. From this we also detail the directed mining of biosynthetic scaffolds and resistance determinants to reveal structures with a high likelihood of having previously unknown modes of action. Implementing this pipeline led to investigations of the telomycin family of natural products from Streptomyces canus, revealing that these bactericidal molecules possess a new antibacterial mode of action dependent on the bacterial phospholipid cardiolipin.
The development of new “omics” platforms is having a significant impact on the landscape of natural products discovery. However, despite the advantages that such platforms bring to the field, there remains no straightforward method for characterizing the chemical landscape of natural products libraries using two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (2D-NMR) experiments. NMR analysis provides a powerful complement to mass spectrometric approaches, given the universal coverage of NMR experiments. However, the high degree of signal overlap, particularly in one-dimensional NMR spectra, has limited applications of this approach. To address this issue, we have developed a new data analysis platform for complex mixture analysis, termed MADByTE (Metabolomics and Dereplication by Two-Dimensional Experiments). This platform employs a combination of TOCSY and HSQC spectra to identify spin system features within complex mixtures and then matches spin system features between samples to create a chemical similarity network for a given sample set. In this report we describe the design and construction of the MADByTE platform and demonstrate the application of chemical similarity networks for both the dereplication of known compound scaffolds and the prioritization of bioactive metabolites from a bacterial prefractionated extract library.
Few tools exist in natural products discovery to integrate biological screening and untargeted mass spectrometry data at the library scale. Previously, we reported Compound Activity Mapping as a strategy for predicting compound bioactivity profiles directly from primary screening results on extract libraries. We now present NP Analyst, an open online platform for Compound Activity Mapping that accepts bioassay data of almost any type, and is compatible with mass spectrometry data from major instrument manufacturers via the mzML format. In addition, NP Analyst will accept processed mass spectrometry data from the MZmine 2 and GNPS open-source platforms, making it a versatile tool for integration with existing discovery workflows. We demonstrate the utility of this new tool for both the dereplication of known compounds and the discovery of novel bioactive natural products using a challenging low-resolution antimicrobial bioassay data set. This new platform is available at .
Ohmyungsamycin A and ecumicin are structurally related cyclic depsipeptide natural products that possess activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), the causative agent of tuberculosis (TB). Herein, we describe the design and synthesis of a library of analogues of these two natural products using an efficient solid-phase synthesis and late-stage macrolactamization strategy. Lead analogues possessed potent activity against Mtb in vitro (minimum inhibitory concentration 125−500 nM) and were shown to inhibit protein degradation by the mycobacterial ClpC1− ClpP1P2 protease with an associated enhancement of ClpC1 ATPase activity. The most promising analogue from the series exhibited rapid bactericidal killing activity against Mtb, capable of sterilizing cultures after 7 days, and retained bactericidal activity against hypoxic non-replicating Mtb. This natural product analogue was also active in an in vivo zebrafish model of infection.
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