Studies of antibacterial activity (in vitro and in vivo) and mode of action for des-acyl tridecaptins (DATs)

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Cédric Couturier
  • Quentin Ronzon
  • Giulia Lattanzi
  • Iain Lingard
  • Sebastien Coyne
  • Veronique Cazals
  • Nelly Dubarry
  • Stephane Yvon
  • Corinne Leroi-Geissler
  • Obdulia Rabal Gracia
  • Joanne Teague
  • Sylvie Sordello
  • David Corbett
  • Caroline Bauch
  • Chantal Monlong
  • Lloyd Payne
  • Thomas Taillier
  • Hazel Fuchs
  • Mark Broenstrup
  • Peter H. Harrison
  • Lucile Moynié
  • Abirami Lakshminarayanan
  • Tiberiu Marius Gianga
  • Rohanah Hussain
  • James H. Naismith
  • Michael Mourez
  • Eric Bacqué
  • Jean Francois Sabuco

Tridecaptins comprise a class of linear cationic lipopeptides with an N-terminal fatty acyl moiety. These 13-mer antimicrobial peptides consist of a combination of D- and L-amino acids, conferring increased proteolytic stability. Intriguingly, they are biosynthesized by non-ribosomal peptide synthetases in the same bacterial species that also produce the cyclic polymyxins displaying similar fatty acid tails. Previously, the des-acyl analog of TriA1 (termed H-TriA1) was found to possess very weak antibacterial activity, albeit it potentiated the effect of several antibiotics. In the present study, two series of des-acyl tridecaptins were explored with the aim of improving the direct antibacterial effect. At the same time, overall physico-chemical properties were modulated by amino acid substitution(s) to diminish the risk of undesired levels of hemolysis and to avoid an impairment of mammalian cell viability, since these properties are typically associated with highly hydrophobic cationic peptides. Microbiology and biophysics tools were used to determine bacterial uptake, while circular dichroism and isothermal calorimetry were used to probe the mode of action. Several analogs had improved antibacterial activity (as compared to that of H-TriA1) against Enterobacteriaceae. Optimization enabled identification of the lead compound 29 that showed a good ADMET profile as well as in vivo efficacy in a variety of mouse models of infection.

Original languageEnglish
Article number116097
JournalEuropean Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
Volume265
Number of pages20
ISSN0223-5234
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Elsevier Masson SAS

    Research areas

  • Antibiotic, Antimicrobial peptides, Gram-negative bacteria, Solid-phase peptide synthesis, Structure-activity relationships, tridecaptins

ID: 380203118