Stable pantothenamide bioisosteres: novel antibiotics for Gram-positive bacteria

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Abstract

The emergence of multidrug resistant bacteria has prioritized the development of new antibiotics. N-substituted pantothenamides, analogs of the natural compound pantetheine, were reported to target bacterial coenzyme A biosynthesis, but these compounds have never reached the clinic due to their instability in biological fluids. Plasma-stable pantothenamide analogs could overcome these issues. We first synthesized a number of bioisosteres of the prototypic pantothenamide N7-Pan. A compound with an inverted amide bond (CXP18.6-012) was found to provide plasma-stability with minimal loss of activity compared to the parent compound N7-Pan. Next, we synthesized inverted pantothenamides with a large variety of side chains. Among these we identified a number of novel stable inverted pantothenamides with selective activity against Gram-positive bacteria such as staphylococci and streptococci, at low micromolar concentrations. These data provide future direction for the development of pantothenamides with clinical potential.

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Jansen, P. A. M., van der Krieken, D. A., Botman, P. N. M., Blaauw, R. H., Cavina, L., Raaijmakers, E. M., … Schalkwijk, J. (2019). Stable pantothenamide bioisosteres: novel antibiotics for Gram-positive bacteria. Journal of Antibiotics, 72(9), 682–692. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41429-019-0196-6

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