Non-Carbohydrate Glycomimetics as Inhibitors of Calcium(II)-Binding Lectins

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Abstract

Because of the antimicrobial resistance crisis, lectins are considered novel drug targets. Pseudomonas aeruginosa utilizes LecA and LecB in the infection process. Inhibition of both lectins with carbohydrate-derived molecules can reduce biofilm formation to restore antimicrobial susceptibility. Here, we focused on non-carbohydrate inhibitors for LecA to explore new avenues for lectin inhibition. From a screening cascade we obtained one experimentally confirmed hit, a catechol, belonging to the well-known PAINS compounds. Rigorous analyses validated electron-deficient catechols as millimolar LecA inhibitors. The first co-crystal structure of a non-carbohydrate inhibitor in complex with a bacterial lectin clearly demonstrates the catechol mimicking the binding of natural glycosides with LecA. Importantly, catechol 3 is the first non-carbohydrate lectin ligand that binds bacterial and mammalian calcium(II)-binding lectins, giving rise to this fundamentally new class of glycomimetics.

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APA

Kuhaudomlarp, S., Siebs, E., Shanina, E., Topin, J., Joachim, I., da Silva Figueiredo Celestino Gomes, P., … Titz, A. (2021). Non-Carbohydrate Glycomimetics as Inhibitors of Calcium(II)-Binding Lectins. Angewandte Chemie - International Edition, 60(15), 8104–8114. https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.202013217

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