To cope with the global bacterial multidrug resistance, scientific communities have devoted significant efforts to develop novel antibiotics, particularly those with new modes of actions. Teixobactin, recently isolated from uncultured bacteria, is considered as a promising first-in-class drug candidate for clinical development. Herein, we report its total synthesis by a highly convergent Ser ligation approach and this strategy allows us to prepare several analogues of the natural product.
A convergent
synthesis via the late-stage serine ligation of naturally
occurring calcium-dependent antibiotic CDA3a and its analogues has
been developed, which allowed us to readily synthesize the analogues
with the variation on the lipid tail. Some analogues were found to
show 100–500-fold higher antimicrobial activity than the natural
compound CDA3a against drug resistant bacteria. This study will enhance
our understanding of CDA3a and provide valuable antibacterial lead
candidates for further development.
Daptomycin is effective
in treating infections caused by antibiotic-resistant
Gram-positive pathogens, including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus
aureus (MRSA), vancomycin-resistant Enterococci (VRE), and vancomycin-resistant S. aureus (VRSA).
Due to its distinct mechanism of action toward multidrug-resistant
bacteria, daptomycin provides an attractive structural motif to generate
new daptomycin-based antibiotics to combat the problem of bacterial
resistance. In this study, we used the total synthesis method to produce
daptomycin analogues with a variety in terms of types and sites of
modifications. Five classes of daptomycin analogues were synthesized,
and the antimicrobial activities of the analogues were analyzed by
several biological assays. From this study, we established a comprehensive
structure–activity relationship of daptomycin which will lay
the foundation for the further development of daptomycin-based antibiotics.
Convergent Ser/Thr ligation has been used to prepare a series of teixobactin analogues (28 in total) to establish a structure-activity relationship of teixobactin. anti-bacterial evaluations of these synthetic analogues have revealed the critical amino acid residues and the sites tolerable of modifications. These studies will shed lights on the further development of teixobactin analogues with improved antibacterial activities.
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