Thienopyrimidinone derivatives that inhibit bacterial tRNA (guanine37-N1)-methyltransferase (TrmD) by restructuring the active site with a tyrosine-flipping mechanism

Among the >120 modified ribonucleosides in the prokaryotic epitranscriptome, many tRNA modifications are critical to bacterial survival, which makes their synthetic enzymes ideal targets for antibiotic development. Here we performed a structure-based design of inhibitors of tRNA-(N1G37) methyltra...

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Main Authors: Zhong, Wenhe, Pasunooti, Kalyan Kumar, Balamkundu, Seetharamsing, Wong, Yee Hwa, Nah, Qianhui, Gadi, Vinod, Gnanakalai, Shanmugavel, Chionh, Yok Hian, McBee, Megan E., Gopal, Pooja, Lim, Siau Hoi, Olivier, Nelson, Buurman, Ed T., Dick, Thomas, Liu, Chuan Fa, Lescar, Julien, Dedon, Peter C.
Other Authors: School of Biological Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/148942
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1489422023-02-28T16:57:11Z Thienopyrimidinone derivatives that inhibit bacterial tRNA (guanine37-N1)-methyltransferase (TrmD) by restructuring the active site with a tyrosine-flipping mechanism Zhong, Wenhe Pasunooti, Kalyan Kumar Balamkundu, Seetharamsing Wong, Yee Hwa Nah, Qianhui Gadi, Vinod Gnanakalai, Shanmugavel Chionh, Yok Hian McBee, Megan E. Gopal, Pooja Lim, Siau Hoi Olivier, Nelson Buurman, Ed T. Dick, Thomas Liu, Chuan Fa Lescar, Julien Dedon, Peter C. School of Biological Sciences Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology Institute of Structural Biology Science::Biological sciences Inhibitors Peptides and Proteins Among the >120 modified ribonucleosides in the prokaryotic epitranscriptome, many tRNA modifications are critical to bacterial survival, which makes their synthetic enzymes ideal targets for antibiotic development. Here we performed a structure-based design of inhibitors of tRNA-(N1G37) methyltransferase, TrmD, which is an essential enzyme in many bacterial pathogens. On the basis of crystal structures of TrmDs from Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Mycobacterium tuberculosis, we synthesized a series of thienopyrimidinone derivatives with nanomolar potency against TrmD in vitro and discovered a novel active site conformational change triggered by inhibitor binding. This tyrosine-flipping mechanism is uniquely found in P. aeruginosa TrmD and renders the enzyme inaccessible to the cofactor S-adenosyl-l-methionine (SAM) and probably to the substrate tRNA. Biophysical and biochemical structure-activity relationship studies provided insights into the mechanisms underlying the potency of thienopyrimidinones as TrmD inhibitors, with several derivatives found to be active against Gram-positive and mycobacterial pathogens. These results lay a foundation for further development of TrmD inhibitors as antimicrobial agents. Ministry of Education (MOE) National Research Foundation (NRF) Published version This research was supported by the National Research Foundation of Singapore through the Singapore-MIT-Alliance for Research and Technology (SMART) Infectious Disease and Antimicrobial Resistance Interdisciplinary Research Groups; SMART Innovation Centre grant ING137070-BIO to P.C.D., L.C.F., and J.L.; and AcRF grants Tier1 RG154/14 and MOE2015- T2-2-075 to J.L. 2021-05-10T07:56:08Z 2021-05-10T07:56:08Z 2019 Journal Article Zhong, W., Pasunooti, K. K., Balamkundu, S., Wong, Y. H., Nah, Q., Gadi, V., Gnanakalai, S., Chionh, Y. H., McBee, M. E., Gopal, P., Lim, S. H., Olivier, N., Buurman, E. T., Dick, T., Liu, C. F., Lescar, J. & Dedon, P. C. (2019). Thienopyrimidinone derivatives that inhibit bacterial tRNA (guanine37-N1)-methyltransferase (TrmD) by restructuring the active site with a tyrosine-flipping mechanism. Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, 62(17), 7788-7805. https://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jmedchem.9b00582 0022-2623 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/148942 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.9b00582 31442049 2-s2.0-85072103389 17 62 7788 7805 en ING137070-BIO RG154/14 MOE2015- T2-2-075 Journal of Medicinal Chemistry © 2019 American Chemical Society. This is an open access article published under a Creative Commons Non-Commercial No Derivative Works (CC-BY-NC-ND) Attribution License, which permits copying and redistribution of the article, and creation of adaptations, all for non-commercial purposes. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Biological sciences
Inhibitors
Peptides and Proteins
spellingShingle Science::Biological sciences
Inhibitors
Peptides and Proteins
Zhong, Wenhe
Pasunooti, Kalyan Kumar
Balamkundu, Seetharamsing
Wong, Yee Hwa
Nah, Qianhui
Gadi, Vinod
Gnanakalai, Shanmugavel
Chionh, Yok Hian
McBee, Megan E.
Gopal, Pooja
Lim, Siau Hoi
Olivier, Nelson
Buurman, Ed T.
Dick, Thomas
Liu, Chuan Fa
Lescar, Julien
Dedon, Peter C.
Thienopyrimidinone derivatives that inhibit bacterial tRNA (guanine37-N1)-methyltransferase (TrmD) by restructuring the active site with a tyrosine-flipping mechanism
description Among the >120 modified ribonucleosides in the prokaryotic epitranscriptome, many tRNA modifications are critical to bacterial survival, which makes their synthetic enzymes ideal targets for antibiotic development. Here we performed a structure-based design of inhibitors of tRNA-(N1G37) methyltransferase, TrmD, which is an essential enzyme in many bacterial pathogens. On the basis of crystal structures of TrmDs from Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Mycobacterium tuberculosis, we synthesized a series of thienopyrimidinone derivatives with nanomolar potency against TrmD in vitro and discovered a novel active site conformational change triggered by inhibitor binding. This tyrosine-flipping mechanism is uniquely found in P. aeruginosa TrmD and renders the enzyme inaccessible to the cofactor S-adenosyl-l-methionine (SAM) and probably to the substrate tRNA. Biophysical and biochemical structure-activity relationship studies provided insights into the mechanisms underlying the potency of thienopyrimidinones as TrmD inhibitors, with several derivatives found to be active against Gram-positive and mycobacterial pathogens. These results lay a foundation for further development of TrmD inhibitors as antimicrobial agents.
author2 School of Biological Sciences
author_facet School of Biological Sciences
Zhong, Wenhe
Pasunooti, Kalyan Kumar
Balamkundu, Seetharamsing
Wong, Yee Hwa
Nah, Qianhui
Gadi, Vinod
Gnanakalai, Shanmugavel
Chionh, Yok Hian
McBee, Megan E.
Gopal, Pooja
Lim, Siau Hoi
Olivier, Nelson
Buurman, Ed T.
Dick, Thomas
Liu, Chuan Fa
Lescar, Julien
Dedon, Peter C.
format Article
author Zhong, Wenhe
Pasunooti, Kalyan Kumar
Balamkundu, Seetharamsing
Wong, Yee Hwa
Nah, Qianhui
Gadi, Vinod
Gnanakalai, Shanmugavel
Chionh, Yok Hian
McBee, Megan E.
Gopal, Pooja
Lim, Siau Hoi
Olivier, Nelson
Buurman, Ed T.
Dick, Thomas
Liu, Chuan Fa
Lescar, Julien
Dedon, Peter C.
author_sort Zhong, Wenhe
title Thienopyrimidinone derivatives that inhibit bacterial tRNA (guanine37-N1)-methyltransferase (TrmD) by restructuring the active site with a tyrosine-flipping mechanism
title_short Thienopyrimidinone derivatives that inhibit bacterial tRNA (guanine37-N1)-methyltransferase (TrmD) by restructuring the active site with a tyrosine-flipping mechanism
title_full Thienopyrimidinone derivatives that inhibit bacterial tRNA (guanine37-N1)-methyltransferase (TrmD) by restructuring the active site with a tyrosine-flipping mechanism
title_fullStr Thienopyrimidinone derivatives that inhibit bacterial tRNA (guanine37-N1)-methyltransferase (TrmD) by restructuring the active site with a tyrosine-flipping mechanism
title_full_unstemmed Thienopyrimidinone derivatives that inhibit bacterial tRNA (guanine37-N1)-methyltransferase (TrmD) by restructuring the active site with a tyrosine-flipping mechanism
title_sort thienopyrimidinone derivatives that inhibit bacterial trna (guanine37-n1)-methyltransferase (trmd) by restructuring the active site with a tyrosine-flipping mechanism
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/148942
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