“…In case of prokaryotic TMKs various compounds such as modified thymine base, 3 substituted nucleosides and nucleotides, 2 ,3 bicyclic analogues, thymidine 5 -O-monophosphate analogues, substituted benzyl thymine analogues and acyclic nucleoside analogues were tested against Mycobacterium tuberculosis Vanheusden et al, 2002Vanheusden et al, , 2003Vanheusden et al, 2004;Van Daele et al, 2006;Gasse et al, 2007;Familiar et al, 2008). Piperidinylthymine analogues were found to be active against Staphylococcus aureus TMK and a commercially available compound 1-methyl-6-phenyl imidazopyrinon and its derivatives inhibited Pseudomonas aeruginosa TMK at nanomolar concentration (Martinez-Botella et al, 2012;Choi et al, 2012). Recently TMPK has been validated as a drug target in gram-positive bacterium Staphylococcus aureus (Keating et al, 2012).…”