EBioMedicine (Apr 2024)

High-throughput screening of small-molecules libraries identified antibacterials against clinically relevant multidrug-resistant A. baumannii and K. pneumoniaeResearch in context

  • Benjamin Blasco,
  • Soojin Jang,
  • Hiroki Terauchi,
  • Naoki Kobayashi,
  • Shuichi Suzuki,
  • Yuichiro Akao,
  • Atsuko Ochida,
  • Nao Morishita,
  • Terufumi Takagi,
  • Hiroyuki Nagamiya,
  • Yamato Suzuki,
  • Toshiaki Watanabe,
  • Hyunjung Lee,
  • Sol Lee,
  • David Shum,
  • Ahreum Cho,
  • Dahae Koh,
  • Soonju Park,
  • Honggun Lee,
  • Kideok Kim,
  • Henni-Karoliina Ropponen,
  • Renata Maria Augusto da Costa,
  • Steven Dunn,
  • Sunil Ghosh,
  • Peter Sjö,
  • Laura J.V. Piddock

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 102
p. 105073

Abstract

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Summary: Background: The current pipeline for new antibiotics fails to fully address the significant threat posed by drug-resistant Gram-negative bacteria that have been identified by the World Health Organization (WHO) as a global health priority. New antibacterials acting through novel mechanisms of action are urgently needed. We aimed to identify new chemical entities (NCEs) with activity against Klebsiella pneumoniae and Acinetobacter baumannii that could be developed into a new treatment for drug-resistant infections. Methods: We developed a high-throughput phenotypic screen and selection cascade for generation of hit compounds active against multidrug-resistant (MDR) strains of K. pneumoniae and A. baumannii. We screened compound libraries selected from the proprietary collections of three pharmaceutical companies that had exited antibacterial drug discovery but continued to accumulate new compounds to their collection. Compounds from two out of three libraries were selected using “eNTRy rules” criteria associated with increased likelihood of intracellular accumulation in Escherichia coli. Findings: We identified 72 compounds with confirmed activity against K. pneumoniae and/or drug-resistant A. baumannii. Two new chemical series with activity against XDR A. baumannii were identified meeting our criteria of potency (EC50 ≤50 μM) and absence of cytotoxicity (HepG2 CC50 ≥100 μM and red blood cell lysis HC50 ≥100 μM). The activity of close analogues of the two chemical series was also determined against A. baumannii clinical isolates. Interpretation: This work provides proof of principle for the screening strategy developed to identify NCEs with antibacterial activity against multidrug-resistant critical priority pathogens such as K. pneumoniae and A. baumannii. The screening and hit selection cascade established here provide an excellent foundation for further screening of new compound libraries to identify high quality starting points for new antibacterial lead generation projects. Funding: BMBF and GARDP.

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