Q2 · MEDICINE
Article
Author: Schweizer, Herbert P. ; Cummings, Jason E. ; Beaupre, Adam J. ; Bommineni, Gopal R. ; Liu, Nina ; Neckles, Carla ; Yu, Weixuan ; Tonge, Peter J. ; Knudson, Susan E. ; Wang, Hui ; Trunck, Lily A. ; Slayden, Richard A. ; Khanna, Avinash
ABSTRACT:
Identification of a novel class of anti-
Burkholderia
compounds is key in addressing antimicrobial resistance to current therapies as well as naturally occurring resistance. The FabI enoyl-ACP reductase in
Burkholderia
is an underexploited target that presents an opportunity for development of a new class of inhibitors. A library of substituted diphenyl ethers was used to identify FabI1-specific inhibitors for assessment in
Burkholderia pseudomallei ex vivo
and murine efficacy models. Active FabI1 inhibitors were identified in a two-stage format consisting of percent inhibition screening and MIC determination by the broth microdilution method. Each compound was evaluated against the
B. pseudomallei
1026b (efflux-proficient) and Bp400 (efflux-compromised) strains.
In vitro
screening identified candidate substituted diphenyl ethers that exhibited MICs of less than 1 μg/ml, and enzyme kinetic assays were used to assess potency and specificity against the FabI1 enzyme. These compounds demonstrated activity in a
Burkholderia ex vivo
efficacy model, and two demonstrated efficacy in an acute
B. pseudomallei
mouse infection model. This work establishes substituted diphenyl ethers as a suitable platform for development of novel anti-
Burkholderia
compounds that can be used for treatment of melioidosis.