Chemical Proteomics Reveals Antibiotic Targets of Oxadiazolones in MRSA

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Abstract

Phenotypic screening is a powerful approach to identify novel antibiotics, but elucidation of the targets responsible for the antimicrobial activity is often challenging in the case of compounds with a polypharmacological mode of action. Here, we show that activity-based protein profiling maps the target interaction landscape of a series of 1,3,4-oxadiazole-3-ones identified in a phenotypic screen to have high antibacterial potency against multidrug-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. In situ competitive and comparative chemical proteomics with a tailor-made activity-based probe, in combination with transposon and resistance studies, revealed several cysteine and serine hydrolases as relevant targets. Our data showcase oxadiazolones as a novel antibacterial chemotype with a polypharmacological mode of action, in which FabH, FphC, and AdhE play a central role.

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Bakker, A. T., Kotsogianni, I., Mirenda, L., Straub, V. M., Avalos, M., van den Berg, R. J. B. H. N., … van der Stelt, M. (2023). Chemical Proteomics Reveals Antibiotic Targets of Oxadiazolones in MRSA. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 145(2), 1136–1143. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.2c10819

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