Abstract
Killing more than one million people each year, tuberculosis remains the leading cause of death from a single infectious agent. The growing threat of multidrug-resistant strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis stresses the need for alternative therapies. EthR, a mycobacterial transcriptional regulator, is involved in the control of the bioactivation of the second-line drug ethionamide. We have previously reported the discovery of in vitro nanomolar boosters of ethionamide through fragment-based approaches. In this study, we have further explored the structure-activity and structure-property relationships in this chemical family. By combining structure-based drug design and in vitro evaluation of the compounds, we identified a new oxadiazole compound as the first fragment-based ethionamide booster which proved to be active in vivo, in an acute model of tuberculosis infection.
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Villemagne, B., MacHelart, A., Tran, N. C., Flipo, M., Moune, M., Leroux, F., … Willand, N. (2020). Fragment-Based Optimized EthR Inhibitors with in Vivo Ethionamide Boosting Activity. ACS Infectious Diseases, 6(3), 366–378. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsinfecdis.9b00277
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