Q2 · BIOLOGY
ArticleOA
Author: Bujaroski, Richard S ; McNeil, Matthew B ; Harold, Liam K ; Keighley, Laura ; Hards, Kiel ; Langer, Julian D ; Meier, Thomas ; Cheung, Chen-Yi ; Berney, Michael ; Waller, Natalie ; Buckley, Benjamin J ; Cook, Gregory M ; Opel-Reading, Helen K ; Preiss, Laura ; Krause, Kurt ; Rhee, Kyu Y ; Hasenoehrl, Erik J ; Tee, Zhi Shean ; Menorca, Ayana ; Kelso, Michael J ; Tyndall, Joel D A ; Adolph, Cara
Abstract:Increasing antimicrobial resistance compels the search for next-generation inhibitors with differing or multiple molecular targets. In this regard, energy conservation in Mycobacterium tuberculosis has been clinically validated as a promising new drug target for combatting drug-resistant strains of M. tuberculosis. Here, we show that HM2-16F, a 6-substituted derivative of the FDA-approved drug amiloride, is an anti-tubercular inhibitor with bactericidal properties comparable to the FDA-approved drug bedaquiline (BDQ; Sirturo®) and inhibits the growth of bedaquiline-resistant mutants. We show that HM2-16F weakly inhibits the F1Fo-ATP synthase, depletes ATP, and affects the entry of acetyl-CoA into the Krebs cycle. HM2-16F synergizes with the cytochrome bcc-aa3 oxidase inhibitor Q203 (Telacebec) and co-administration with Q203 sterilizes in vitro cultures in 14 days. Synergy with Q203 occurs via direct inhibition of the cytochrome bd oxidase by HM2-16F. This study shows that amiloride derivatives represent a promising discovery platform for targeting energy generation in drug-resistant tuberculosis.