FabI (enoyl acyl carrier protein reductase) - A potential broad spectrum therapeutic target and its inhibitors

Development of new anti-bacterial agents acting upon underexploited targets and thus evading known mechanisms of resistance is the need of the hour. The highly conserved and distinct bacterial fatty acid biosynthesis pathway (FAS-II), presents a validated and yet relatively underexploited target for...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of medicinal chemistry 2020-12, Vol.208, p.112757-112757, Article 112757
Hauptverfasser: Rana, Preeti, Ghouse, Shaik Mahammad, Akunuri, Ravikumar, Madhavi, Y.V., Chopra, Sidharth, Nanduri, Srinivas
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Development of new anti-bacterial agents acting upon underexploited targets and thus evading known mechanisms of resistance is the need of the hour. The highly conserved and distinct bacterial fatty acid biosynthesis pathway (FAS-II), presents a validated and yet relatively underexploited target for drug discovery. FabI and its isoforms (FabL, FabK, FabV and InhA) are essential enoyl-ACP reductases present in several microorganisms. In addition, the components of the FAS-II pathway are distinct from the multi-enzyme FAS-I complex found in mammals. Thus, inhibition of FabI and its isoforms is anticipated to result in broad-spectrum antibacterial activity. Several research groups from industry and academic laboratories have devoted significant efforts to develop effective FabI-targeting antibiotics, which are currently in various stages of clinical development for the treatment of multi-drug resistant bacterial infections. This review summarizes all the natural as well as synthetic inhibitors of gram-positive and gram-negative enoyl ACP reductases (FabI). The knowledge of the reported inhibitors can aid in the development of broad-spectrum antibacterials specifically targeting FabI enzymes from S. aureus, S. epidermidis, B. anthracis, B. cereus, E. coli, P. aeruginosa, P. falciparum and M. tuberculosis. [Display omitted] •Bacterial FAS-II pathway presents a validated and yet relatively underexploited target for drug discovery.•Various synthetic and natural inhibitors of FabI and its isoforms are discussed.•Intervention in FAS-II pathway promises generation of antibiotics evading known mechanisms of resistance.•Inhibition of ENR/FabI leads to broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity.
ISSN:0223-5234
1768-3254
DOI:10.1016/j.ejmech.2020.112757