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Review Enoyl acyl carrier protein reductase inhibitors: a patent review (2006 -- 2010) Introduction 2. Structure and function of ENR 3. Specificity for substrate binding of ENR Expert Opin. Ther. Patents Downloaded from informahealthcare.com by University of Toronto on 06/24/11 For personal use only. Xiaoyun Lu, Kun Huang & Qidong You† 1. 4. Inhibitors of ENR 5. Conclusions 6. Expert opinion † China Pharmaceutical University, Department of Medicinal Chemistry, Nanjing, China Introduction: Bacterial enoyl acyl carrier protein reductase (ENR) specificity reduces the double bond in enoyl thioester substrates in the final enzymatic step of the elongation cycle of the fatty acid synthase-II pathway. Its function is essential for bacterial organism survival, making it an attractive target for the development of novel antibiotics. The structural features and therapeutic potential of this enzyme have stimulated the rational design of ENR inhibitors, and important progress has been achieved to date. Areas covered: This review describes recent advances made in the search for ENR inhibitors, as reflected by patent applications filed from 2006 to 2010, together with an overview of the relevant literature. The first section of this paper provides a background of the biology of ENR, followed by a description of its structure and function. The main section describes the substrate specificities for ENR, and the structure-based rational design of patent inhibitors originating from different companies and academic groups. Expert opinion: The increase in the number of ENR inhibitors bodes well for the development of new therapeutics against multidrug-resistant bacteria. The challenge is now to improve the pharmacokinetic parameters of these inhibitors and translate them into clinical studies. Keywords: antibacterial, enoyl ACP reductase (FabI or InhA), FAS, inhibitors, rational design, substrate binding Expert Opin. Ther. Patents (2011) 21(7):1007-1022 1. Introduction The emergence of bacterial resistance to most of the antibiotics currently in clinical use becomes a worldwide concern [1]. In particular, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) [2], penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae [3] and multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) [4] have become troublesome due to the ineffectiveness of existing therapeutics. In the case of TB, the WHO estimates that a third of the world’s population is infected with the latent form of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and that > 0.5 million people worldwide are infected with MDRTB [5]. Novel antibiotics are urgently required to overcome these resistances. As fatty acid biosynthesis in pathogenic microorganisms is essential for cell viability, the enzymes involved in the fatty acid biosynthesis pathway have recently attracted considerable interest, a genomics-driven target for antibacterial drug discovery [6,7]. Fatty acid biosynthesis is conducted through the fatty acid synthase (FAS) system, which is divided into two distinct forms. FAS-I is made of large multifunctional enzymes that catalyze all of the reactions of fatty acid chain elongation and the majority are identified in eukaryote organisms [8]. FAS-II is often identified among most bacteria strains and the plastids of plants. It is a dissociated system wherein each reaction of chain initiation and elongation is catalyzed by a unique protein [9,10]. The enzymatic reactions for chain initiation and one cycle of elongation for a typical FAS-II have been well characterized in Escherichia coli (Figure 1) [11,12]. 10.1517/13543776.2011.581227 © 2011 Informa UK, Ltd. ISSN 1354-3776 All rights reserved: reproduction in whole or in part not permitted 1007 Enoyl-ACP reductase inhibitors: a patent review (2006 -- 2010) Article highlights. . . . . Expert Opin. Ther. Patents Downloaded from informahealthcare.com by University of Toronto on 06/24/11 For personal use only. . Enoyl acyl carrier protein reductase (ENR) remains an attractive target for the development of novel antibiotics in the future. The specificity for substrate binding of ENR is investigated. A number of inhibitors of ENR reported from patents and associated with literatures are described, including diphenyl ethers, pyrrolidine carboxamides, aryl-eneamides and pyridones. Diphenyl ethers possess broad spectrum antibacterial and antiplasmodial activity. The resolved co-crystal structures of ENR with diverse inhibitors, especially for the conserved interactions with the active site, play an important role for structurebased drug design of more potent inhibitors. This box summarizes key points contained in the article. The NADH-dependent enoyl acyl carrier protein reductase, ENR (FabI or InhA), is a key enzyme in the last step of each cycle of fatty acid elongation, which catalyzes the NADHdependent stereospecific reduction of a, b-unsaturated fatty acids bound to the acyl carrier protein (ACP) [13-15]. The essence of ENR for bacterial viability, together with the ideal selectivity, suggests the ideal that ENR can be used as a particularly promising target for the development of novel antibiotics against MDR strains. During recent years, numerous research groups have engaged in developing new types of ENR inhibitors. Many different types of ENR inhibitors have been designed, some of which are in preclinical studies [16,17]. Below, we briefly summarize our current knowledge on ENR and focus on the patented inhibitors of ENR from 2006 to 2010. 2. Structure and function of ENR ENR is present in many important human pathogens, most of them having multi-resistant E. coli (ecFabI) [18], M. tuberculosis (InhA) [15,19], S. aureus (saFabI) [20], Plasmodium falciparum (pfENR) [21], Bacillus anthracis (baENR) [22], Francisella tularensis (ftuFabI) [23] and Toxoplasma gondii (TgENR) [24]. Some organisms also contain other enoyl reductases (FabK [25], FabL [26] and FabV [27,28]) for catalyzing the reduction reaction, such as Enterococcus faecalis, Pseudomonas aeruginose and Burkholderia mallei. The structure and active site of ENR from different species are similar, and we focus on the ecFabI enzyme but describe InhA and others when they provide substrate specificity. Moreover, X-ray structure date of ENR homologues from different microorganisms are available [15,18,29], which provide a good starting point for the rational design of novel ENR inhibitors. ENR are tetrameric a/b proteins with classic Rossmann fold structures that bind the nucleotide cofactor in similar regions of the monomer. A two-helix excursion from this core structure creates a helical subdomain positioned over the 1008 C-terminal edge of the b-sheet, and there is a deep crevice in the molecule between the subdomain and the core [9]. The active site of ENR, the signature active site tyrosine and lysine residues are situated within this cleft. The general mechanism of the reduction of ENR has been extensively studied that is similar for most bacterial strains, for instance in E. coli as presented in Figure 2. FabI uses NADH to reduce the C2-C3 carbon-carbon double bond generated by the prior dehydratase enzymes to complete the synthesis of the acyl chain. The reduction mechanism involves the transfer of a hydride to the C3 carbon of the C2-C3 double bond and the development of an enolate anion on the C1 carbonyl oxygen, which accepts a proton from hydroxyl of the tyrosine 156. The resulting enol then undergoes tautomerization to yield the final product. The key lysine 163 plays the primary role to stabilize the binding of the cofactor through hydrogen bond interactions with the hydroxyl groups on the nicotinamide ribose. In InhA, the role of tyrosine 158 and lysine 165 in the catalytic mechanism is similar to that of ecFabI [30]. 3. Specificity for substrate binding of ENR ENR from different bacterial species show different substrate specificities for the enoyl thioester substrates. For example, ecFabI, saFabI, pfENR and baENR prefer C12-C16 shorter chain substance, whereas InhA uses C16-C56 longer chain substrates. The specificity is determined by a loop of the binding region, called the substrate-binding loop, which has been shown to be flexible [31,32]. Superposition of the crystal structure of ecFabI with InhA demonstrates that there is a significant difference between these two enzymes with respect to the location of their substrate-binding loops. In InhA, the loop (residues 194 -- 220) creates a substance-binding crevice (18 Å) with more depth than loop (residues 192 -- 209) of ecFabI (10 Å). The intrinsic specificity observed in the substrate-binding loop is consistent with the size and shape of the conserved hydrophobic pocket adjacent to the active site of ENR. Triclosan (TCN) is known to inhibit the synthesis of fatty acids in E. coli, S. aureus, M. tuberculosis and other bacteria, targeting diverse ENR at the acyl substrate-binding pocket (Figure 3A) [18]. Crystal structure of ecFabI-TCN complex reveals phenol ring of TCN stacks p--p interaction with the NAD + nicotinamide ring, while phenolic hydroxyl group of TCN forms two hydrogen bonds with the active amino acid Tyr156 and with the 2¢-hydroxyl group of the nicotinamide ribose of the nucleotide. However, in addition to the ecFabI-TCN complex, another molecule of TCN binds to the active site of InhA, which has never been observed in any other ENR-TCN structure [33] (Figure 3B). Obviously, the presence of two molecules of TCN in the active site of InhA is attributed to its specificity substrate-binding loop. These data suggest that the hydrophobic active site of InhA is much more larger than that of ecFabI and other ENRs. Expert Opin. Ther. Patents (2011) 21(7) Lu, Huang & You Recently, the authors’ research group also reviewed some predominant examples of InhA direct inhibitors, which may provide a solid foundation for discovery of new agents for treatment of TB [34]. FabG NADH ENR (FabI and InhA) FabK R R n H2O n O FabA FabZ S O OH NADP+ S ACP ACP NAD+ NADPH O S FabB FabF O n ACP n FabH CoA O ACP O S FabD CoA O O Figure 1. The process of type II FAS in Escherichia coli (R = CH3). R R ACP S O O Diphenyl ethers The broad spectrum antibacterial activity of TCN, combined with its unique structural feature, has made it as starting point for the design of diphenyl ethers with improved activity against ENR from various species. Alkyl diphenyl ethers have been designed by structure-based drug design strategies, replacing chlorine atom on the phenol ring of TCN with various alkyl groups (2PP ~ 14PP), and assayed against InhA (Figure 4) [35,36]. Tonge et al. have claimed a world patent of the diphenyl ether derivatives as InhA inhibitors [35]. The analog 5-octyl-2-phenoxyphenol (8PP) showed the best activity with Ki and IC50 values of 1.1 and 5 nM, respectively. As the alkyl substituent is lengthened from two to eight carbons, a corresponding decrease in IC50 values is observed. However, 14PP is much less potent than 8PP with an IC50 value of 150 nM for InhA. The X-ray crystallographic analysis indicated that the substrate-binding hydrophobic pocket is a major site of interaction for side chains of the alkyl diphenyl ethers binding to InhA (Figure 5). Based on 6PP, Ende et al. reported a series of hexyl diaryl ethers with pyridine ring or nitro-substituted phenyl ring, and so on (Figure 4) [37]. However, the compounds were not as good as the lead compounds with IC50 values of 48 nM to > 100 µM. The SAR analysis of this kind of InhA inhibitor suggested that the introduction of a bulky substituent at the phenyl ring or the incorporation nitrogen atom into the phenyl ring reduces anti-InhA activity. Recently, Freundlich et al. also reported a series of 5-branched alkyl and aryl substituted TCN derivatives using structure-based drug design approach (Figure 4) [38]. The most efficacious inhibitor displayed an IC50 value of 21 nM, which was 50-fold more potent than TCN. Among these, the best inhibitor had a MIC value of 13 µM against H37Rv, and more potent than isoniazid (INH) against two INH-resistant M. tuberculosis strains. However, the novel cyclic azole diphenyl ethers proposed by Kini et al. showed good potency when tested in vitro against H37Rv with MIC 4.1 O CoA CoA S R n O Expert Opin. Ther. Patents Downloaded from informahealthcare.com by University of Toronto on 06/24/11 For personal use only. Inhibitors of ENR Considering ENR as a promising target for antibacterial therapy, many new chemical compounds that can selectively inhibit ENR from different microorganisms, including important human pathogens such as E. coli, M. tuberculosis and P. falciparum, and B. anthracis, have been described. In this section, different patented inhibitors of ENR are listed and compared; the structure--activity relationships (SARs) are also discussed. On the other hand, the determination of the crystal structure of ENR from various species have aided in the structure-based design of new potent inhibitors. S ACP ACP 4. Expert Opin. Ther. Patents (2011) 21(7) 1009 Enoyl-ACP reductase inhibitors: a patent review (2006 -- 2010) S-ACP O H H R Substrate H H2NOC Tyr156 H O N H Expert Opin. Ther. Patents Downloaded from informahealthcare.com by University of Toronto on 06/24/11 For personal use only. NADH O O H O O O P N Lys163 H H H OH O O O R H H Ser120 O H Figure 2. The catalytic reduction mechanism of ec FabI. values of 2.4 ~ 3.7 µM [39]. It is worth noticing that Mutabilis also discovered a series of aryloxy-phenol derivatives, some of which had IC50 values within the nanomolar range against ecFabI [40]. The studies support this fact that a bulky substituent at the 5 position of phenol ring of TCN could perfectly fit the active site of an enzyme with a large volume in the cavity, which is the case of InhA and ftuFabI. This is also consistent with the fact that no inhibition is reported for the other ENRs when these variants of TCN are assayed. The ecFabI, pfENR and baENR are specific for the diphenyl ethers with small volume substituents, such as F, CHO, COOH and short alkyl chains, and so on (compounds 1 -- 5, Figure 6) [22,23,41,42]. Aryl-ene-amides GlaxoSmithKline reported a new series of indole-based derivatives as saFabI and hiFabI inhibitors through highthroughput screening of 305,189 compound collection [43,44]. Preliminary lead compound optimization studies led to the identification of compounds 6 and 7 (Figure 7) [45], which exhibited excellent in vitro and in vivo potency against S. aureus, while with less potency against Haemophilus influenzae [46]. Interestingly, the naphthyridinone 7 also showed excellent activity against E. coli in vitro. Co-crystal structures of both compounds 4.2 1010 bound to ecFabI-NAD+ have been solved (Figure 8). The amide carbonyl of 7 is engaged in hydrogen bonding interactions with the hydroxyl of Tyr156 and the 2¢-hydroxyl of the nicotinamide ribose of the nucleotide. The indole portion occupies the hydrophobic pocket composed of residues Tyr146 and Phe203, and so on. Furthermore, the pyridine nitrogen and the N-acylhydrogen of the naphthyridinone are well positioned for hydrogen bonding interactions with Ala95. The studies demonstrate that they occupy the enoyl substrate-binding region and cause the substrate-binding loop ordering, which is similar to that of TCN bound to ecFabI. On the basis of above results, a benzofuran analog of the naphthyridinone (compound 8, Figure 7) was developed by Affinium Pharmaceuticals [16]. As a result, compound 8 demonstrates potent in vitro activity against a set of clinical isolates of methicillin-susceptible S. aureus (MSSA), MRSA, methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus epidermidis and methicillin-resistant S. epidermidis (MRSE). By introducing basic functionalities at the naphthyridinone of the molecules, the results achieved the development of pyridopyrimidinone 9 and naphthyridinone 10 without reduced potency [17,47]. To improve efficacy and desired physicochemical properties, based on X-ray crystal structure design method, led to the identification of spiro-naphthyridinone piperidine 11 [48,49] Expert Opin. Ther. Patents (2011) 21(7) Lu, Huang & You A. B. Disordered loop Ordered loop TCN2 TCN1 Expert Opin. Ther. Patents Downloaded from informahealthcare.com by University of Toronto on 06/24/11 For personal use only. TCN NAD+ NAD+ Figure 3. Structures of triclosan bound to the A) ec FabI (PDB code: 1QSG) and B) InhA (PDB code: 1P45). The substratebinding loop of ecFabI is ordered and the loop of InhA is disordered. and pyridodiazepinone 12 [37,50-53], which were identified as having submicromolar IC50 values against saFabI and ecFabI. Affinium Pharmaceuticals have claimed patents of the arylene-amides as FabI inhibitors. Furthermore, the in vivo studies suggested that pyridodiazepine 12 could be a good candidate for clinical development as an anti-MRSA drug. pyrrolidine carboxamide classes with good enzyme inhibitory do not exhibit ideal activity against M. tuberculosis H37Rv with MIC above 125 µM. The results suggest that pyrrolidine carboxamides may exhibit poor membrane permeability. Pyridones Screening programs developed by Kitagawa et al. have also identified a lead compound 16 (Figure 11) bearing 4-pyridone basic scaffold as ecFabI inhibitor. Structure optimization studies yielded a set of 4-pyridone derivatives with strong FabIinhibitory activity [55]. The most potent compound 17 showed good activity against ecFabI and S. aureus with IC50 and MIC values of 0.3 µM and 0.5 µg/ml, respectively. The preliminary SAR has revealed that the 1,6-dichlorobenzyl moiety is favorable for both FabI-inhibitory and antibacterial activity. In addition, the substituents at 1-position perform an important role for the activity. More interestingly, the same authors developed other pyridone derivatives having a phenylimidazole moiety as FabI and FabK dual inhibitors through iterative medicinal chemistry and X-ray crystal structure-based design [56,57]. A representative compound 18 showed strong FabI and FabK inhibitory with IC50 values of 0.38 and 0.0045 µM, respectively, and potent antibacterial activity against S. pneumoniae with an MIC value of 0.5 µg/ml. These studies support the point that ENR is probably a valid target 4.4 4.3 Pyrrolidine carboxamides Pyrrolidine carboxamide 13 was discovered by He et al. through high-throughput screening of a library of 30,000 compounds against InhA with an IC50 value of 10.05 µM [54]. Due to the importance of the ketopyrrolidine core, compound 13 was further optimized by replacing the phenyl ring A and cyclohexyl ring C with other groups while keeping ketopyrrolidine core B invariable (Figure 9). Compounds 14 and 15, with symmetric substitutes on the phenyl ring A, show IC50 values of 0.39 and 0.14 µM against InhA, respectively. In the crystal structure, the oxygen of the carbonyl group of ketopyrrolidine is observed to form hydrogen bonds with the hydroxyl group of Tyr158 and with 2¢-hydroxyl of the nicotinamide ribose (Figure 10). The hydrophobic interactions between the large phenyl ring and the active site of InhA are essential for the activity. Meanwhile, for compound 15, it is suspected that hydroxyl group at the phenyl ring enhances the activity by forming hydrogen bond with the protein and causes a subtle change in the binding site. Unfortunately, Expert Opin. Ther. Patents (2011) 21(7) 1011 1012 Expert Opin. Ther. Patents (2011) 21(7) 1 3 4 5 7 13 2000 80 17 11 5 150 IC50 (nM) 5 O O Hexyl diaryl ethers IC50 = 48 nM ~ >100 mM OH Alkyl diphenyl ethers US20060041025 n OH Y Y = N, NH2, NO2, etc Cl OH O Triclosan O Cl Cl Alkyl and aryl diphenyl ethers IC50 = 21 nM ~ >10 mM R1 OH Cl R2 R1 = Alkyl and Aryl R2 = Cl and CN Ar O Cyclic azole diphenyl Ethers MIC = 2.4 – 3.7 mM Cyclic azole Figure 4. The general structures of alkyl diphenyl ether InhA inhibitors. IC50 values are reported against InhA; MIC values are reported against H37Rv. 2PP 4PP 5PP 6PP 8PP 14PP n Expert Opin. Ther. Patents Downloaded from informahealthcare.com by University of Toronto on 06/24/11 For personal use only. Enoyl-ACP reductase inhibitors: a patent review (2006 -- 2010) Lu, Huang & You Met155 Tyr158 8PP Leu218 Expert Opin. Ther. Patents Downloaded from informahealthcare.com by University of Toronto on 06/24/11 For personal use only. NAD Pro193 Figure 5. Structure of 8PP bound to InhA in the presence of NAD+ (PDB code: 2B37). OH OH OH O O Cl O F n 1 2 3 ecKi = 1.1 pM FtuKi = 1.9 nM BaIC50 = 0.5 nM ecKi = 1.5 nM FtuKi = 289 nM n = 0 FtuKi = 1.9 nM n =1 FtuKi = 2.1 nM n = 2 FtuKi = 0.44 nM BaIC50 > 0.8 µM OH Cl OH O Cl O HOOC Cl OHC Cl 4 5 ecKi = 1.3 µM ecIC50 = 2.25 µM pfKi = 0.21 µM pfIC50 = 0.56 µM ecKi = 1.0 µM ecIC50 = 1.83 µM pfKi = 0.18 µM pfIC50 = 0.38 µM Figure 6. The representative diphenyl ethers ecFabI, pfENR, baENR and ftuFabI inhibitors. for the development of broad spectrum antibacterials. However, compound 18 did not show antibacterial activity against S. aureus despite strong FabI inhibitory activity. It may be suggested that the 4-pyridone structure with a long hydrophobic side chain was unfavorable for antibacterial activity due to poor membrane permeability. INH-NAD analogs Isoniazid (INH) has been used in TB chemotherapy since its discovery in 1952. As a pro-drug, INH requires activation by KatG, a catalase-peroxidase enzyme oxidizing INH to an acyl radical binding to position 4 of NAD to form an 4.5 active INH-NAD adduct (19, Figure 12) for binding to InhA [58,59]. The crystal structure of InhA with 19 indicates that the carbonyl oxygen of isonicotinic acyl group forms two hydrogen bonds with hydrogens of the amide group of nicotinamide and the 2¢-hydroxyl of nicotinamide ribose, with the NAD part maintaining in NADH-binding site, not in the substrate-binding site. The disclosure of the mechanism of INH activation brings a new dimension to design of novel inhibitors to mimic INH-NAD adduct, which do not require activation by KatG for combating MDR-TB. It was found that the benzoylhydrazine-NAD adduct (20) formed via the reaction of Expert Opin. Ther. Patents (2011) 21(7) 1013 Enoyl-ACP reductase inhibitors: a patent review (2006 -- 2010) O O N N N N CH3 N CH3 NH2 N H O 7 (WO2001026652) saFabI IC50 = 0.13 µM hi FabI IC50 = 0.39 µM ec FabI IC50 = 0.07 µM saMIC = 0.06 µg/ml hi MIC = 16 µg/ml ec MIC = 8 µg/ml 6 saFabI IC50 = 2.4 µM hi FabI IC50 = 4.2 µM sa MIC = 0.5 µg/ml hi MIC > 64 µg/ml Expert Opin. Ther. Patents Downloaded from informahealthcare.com by University of Toronto on 06/24/11 For personal use only. N O N O CH3 N N H O 8 MSSA MIC90 = 0.015 µg/ml MRSA MIC90 = 0.015 µg/ml MSSE MIC90 = 0.06 µg/ml MRSE MIC90 = 0.03 µg/ml O O N N S CH3 N N H O 9 (WO2004052890) saFabI IC50 = 0.026 µM ecFabI IC50 = 0.007 µM Figure 7. Aryl-ene-amide FabI inhibitors. the activated benzoic acid hydrazide and NAD competes with INH-NAD for binding to InhA. However, due to poor stability, three major structures (open keto-amide, cyclized hemiamidal and oxidized hemiamidal) rather than INH-NAD adducts exist under biomimetic conditions [60], demonstrating as being unable to inhibit InhA. Given the above reasons, Pankiewicz and co-workers redesigned the INH-NAD adduct at position 4 with 4-phenoxy instead of isonicotinoyl residue, affording phenoxy-NAD (21) [61]. Given the glycosidic bond instability of INH-NAD adduct, they also replaced the nitrogen of nicotinamide ring with carbon to provide phenoxy-BAD (22) with an IC50 value of 27 µM against InhA. Recently, because of the easily cleavage and poor membrane permeability of diphosphate-linked molecule, 1014 Bernadou and co-workers have developed the truncated INH-NAD adduct (23) (lacking the ADP moiety) [62]. However, it was indicated that the InhA affinity for the truncated adducts was lost. To overcome this loss, the new truncated adducts bearing a lipophilic fragment as new bi-substrate-type InhA inhibitors were designed based on mimicking the enoyl substrate and the NADH cofactor [63]. A patent application was filed by Bernadou et al. [64]. Among them, compound 24 (Figure 12) was shown to inhibit InhA activity by 41% for only 5 min incubation, much potent than the truncated adduct 23. The work suggests that the addition of a lipophilic residue is valuable for the effect on InhA activity and that the alkyl chain makes a better interaction with the substrate-binding site of InhA. Expert Opin. Ther. Patents (2011) 21(7) Lu, Huang & You O O N N N H CH3 N N N H O 10 (WO2004052890) MSSA MIC90 = 0.5 µg/ml MRSA MIC90 = 0.5 µg/ml O Expert Opin. Ther. Patents Downloaded from informahealthcare.com by University of Toronto on 06/24/11 For personal use only. NH N O CH3 N N H O 11 (WO2007067416) saFabI IC50 = 0.049 µM ecFabI IC50 = 0.0007 µM O NH N N CH3 N N H O 12 (WO2008009122) saFabI IC50 = 0.13 µM ecFabI IC50 = 0.33 µM sa MIC = 0.125 µg/ml ec MIC = 1 µg/ml MRSA MIC = 0.125 µg/ml Figure 7. Aryl-ene-amide FabI inhibitors (continued). Others Other classes of ENR inhibitors that have been discovered include compounds that incorporate rhodamine 25 [21,65,66] and thiopyridine 27 [67,68] moieties (Figure 13). Rhodamine 25 was designed against pfENR with IC50 value of 0.035 µM using a combined approach of rational selection, docking studies, screening and analog search. CG400549 26, developed by CrystalGenomics [65], was highly efficacious against both MRSA and MSSA, including MDR strains. In all, compounds 25 and 26 bear interesting structural similarities to the diphenyl ether class. 4.6 5. Conclusions aryl-ene-amides, pyridones and INH-NAD analogs, have been developed in the last few years. The results achieved in the design of new ENR inhibitors show that, despite differences in the structure and substrate-binding specificity of ENR among different species, one compound can inhibit ENR from different microorganism. Moreover, availability of cocrystal structure ENR with diverse inhibitors, along with the combination of high-throughput screening and rational drug design methodology, will undoubtedly aid in the future discovery and development of more and more new ENR inhibitors that can serve as effective therapeutics against MDR bacteria. 6. As discussed in this review, many new platforms of ENR inhibitors, such as diphenyl ethers, pyrrolidine carboxamides, Expert opinion Due to the increasing drug resistance in pathogenic bacteria, there is a critical need for novel broad spectrum Expert Opin. Ther. Patents (2011) 21(7) 1015 Enoyl-ACP reductase inhibitors: a patent review (2006 -- 2010) Ala95 Tyr156 Tyr146 Expert Opin. Ther. Patents Downloaded from informahealthcare.com by University of Toronto on 06/24/11 For personal use only. NAD Compound 7 Phe203 Figure 8. Structure of compound 7 bound to ecFabI in the presence of NAD+ (PDB code: 1FMP). Cl H N O O A H N B N N O O C 13 IC50 = 10.05 µM Cl 14 IC50 = 0.39 µM O H N OH N O 15 IC50 = 0.14 µM Figure 9. Pyrrolidine carboxamide InhA inhibitors. agents against bacterial pathogens such as MRSA, MRSE and MDR-TB. The ENRs are widely expressed with four isoforms known in bacteria, such as FabI, FabK, FabL and FabV, and have the highly conserved active site, thus providing an effective drug target for antimicrobial 1016 development. Moreover, the lack of obvious homologues for ENR in mammals suggests it might be a good target for the development of selective antimicrobials. Several predominant patents of new ENR inhibitors are described, as well as the role of the 3D-structures of ENR Expert Opin. Ther. Patents (2011) 21(7) Lu, Huang & You Met155 Tyr158 Phe97 Met103 Compound 14 NAD Expert Opin. Ther. Patents Downloaded from informahealthcare.com by University of Toronto on 06/24/11 For personal use only. IIe215 Figure 10. Structure of compound 14 bound to InhA in the presence of NAD+ (PDB code: 2H7M). Cl O Cl O Cl CF3 N Cl N S 16 17 ecFabI IC50 = 0.3 uM saMIC = 0.5 ug/ml ecFabI IC50 = 1.9 µM saMIC = 64 µg/ml O N O N H N MeO2S S N H Cl N H Cl N 18 ecFabI IC50 = 0.38 µM spFabK IC50 = 0.0045 µM sa MIC > 32 µg/ml sp MIC = 0.5 µg/ml Figure 11. Pyridone FabI and FabK inhibitors. Expert Opin. Ther. Patents (2011) 21(7) 1017 Enoyl-ACP reductase inhibitors: a patent review (2006 -- 2010) N O O O NH2 HO OH O O P P O N Expert Opin. Ther. Patents Downloaded from informahealthcare.com by University of Toronto on 06/24/11 For personal use only. O O N N N O OH NH2 O O N OH HO N ADPR OH 19 INH-NAD adduct NH2 20 BH-NAD N O O (CH2)11CH3 O O O OH NH2 NH NH2 HO N O O X ADPR 21 Phenoxy-NAD (X = N) 22 Phenoxy-BAD (X = C) HO OH 23 Truncated adduct N 24 (WO2009101345) Lipophilic truncated adduct Figure 12. INH-NAD analog InhA inhibitors. from different species in drug design process. Interestingly, it was found that all of substrate-binding ENR inhibitors had conserved interactions with the active site, hydrogen bonds network with the active residue Tyr and the 2-hydroxyl group of the nicotinamide ribose of the nucleotide and p--p stacking interaction with the NAD+ nicotinamide ring. However, deeper investigation concentrated on the binding modes of InhA inhibitors would be found that enhancing the hydrophobic interaction of inhibitors with protein was very favorable for the activity. Other breakthrough is compounds that directly inhibit InhA avoiding activation by KatG would be promising candidates for combating MDR-TB. A further task facing medicinal chemists would be the use of structure-based drug design that takes advantage of recently available target structural and inhibitors SAR information. Our group has developed two types of 3D-QSAR models of 1018 InhA inhibitors based on X-ray crystallography and pharmacophore models [69,70]. We expect to see continued interest in developing InhA inhibitors for the treatment of MDRTB and, more importantly, for the treatment of extensively drug-resistant TB. More importantly, no clinical data for these patented compounds were reported until now. Attention must always be paid to clinical development. Some ENR inhibitors that are described in this review exhibit good affinity of ENR, but show poor antibacterial activity. Further efforts will be focused on improving membrane permeability and bioavailability of the inhibitors. It is also important to note that other steps in the FAS-II pathway are candidates for drug development. In particular, the b-ketoacyl-ACP synthase III (FabH) is essential for organism survival and specific to bacterial. The rapid Expert Opin. Ther. Patents (2011) 21(7) Lu, Huang & You O O NH2 O N N S S O S Expert Opin. Ther. Patents Downloaded from informahealthcare.com by University of Toronto on 06/24/11 For personal use only. 25 (US20080051445) (EP1834642) pf FabI IC50 = 0.035 µM 26 CG400549 (WO2007043835) MRSA MIC90 = 0.5 µg/ml MSSA MIC90 = 0.5 µg/ml S CN N S S COOH 27 (WO2004064837) ecFabI IC50 = 4 µM saMIC = 2 µg/ml Figure 13. Other classes of ENR inhibitors. progress in physiology, pharmacology, biochemistry, genomics and proteomics will significantly expedite the investigation of mechanisms in FAS-II homologues in pathogens and the development of synergistic chemotherapeutic regimes targeting multiple points in the biosynthesis of fatty acids. Declaration of interest The authors state no conflict of interest. This work was supported by Innovation Program for the Postgraduates in China Pharmaceutical University, PR China. Expert Opin. Ther. 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