Establishing the selective phospholipid membrane coordination, permeation and lysis properties for a series of 'druggable' supramolecular self-associating antimicrobial amphiphiles

The rise of antimicrobial resistance remains one of the greatest global health threats facing humanity. Furthermore, the development of novel antibiotics has all but ground to a halt due to a collision of intersectional pressures. Herein we determine the antimicrobial efficacy for 14 structurally re...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemical science (Cambridge) 2022-08, Vol.13 (33), p.9761-9773
Hauptverfasser: Boles, Jessica E, Bennett, Charlotte, Baker, Jennifer, Hilton, Kira L. F, Kotak, Hiral A, Clark, Ewan R, Long, Yifan, White, Lisa J, Lai, Hin Yuk, Hind, Charlotte K, Sutton, J. Mark, Garrett, Michelle D, Cheasty, Anne, Ortega-Roldan, Jose L, Charles, Mark, Haynes, Cally J. E, Hiscock, Jennifer R
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The rise of antimicrobial resistance remains one of the greatest global health threats facing humanity. Furthermore, the development of novel antibiotics has all but ground to a halt due to a collision of intersectional pressures. Herein we determine the antimicrobial efficacy for 14 structurally related supramolecular self-associating amphiphiles against clinically relevant Gram-positive methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus and Gram-negative Escherichia coli . We establish the ability of these agents to selectively target phospholipid membranes of differing compositions, through a combination of computational host:guest complex formation simulations, synthetic vesicle lysis, adhesion and membrane fluidity experiments, alongside our novel 1 H NMR CPMG nanodisc coordination assays, to verify a potential mode of action for this class of compounds and enable the production of evermore effective next-generation antimicrobial agents. Finally, we select a 7-compound subset, showing two lead compounds to exhibit 'druggable' profiles through completion of a variety of in vivo and in vitro DMPK studies. A combination of computational and synthetic phospholipid vesicle/nanodisc assays are used to investigate the mode of action for a class of antimicrobial agents, while a range of DMPK studies establish agent druggability.
ISSN:2041-6520
2041-6539
DOI:10.1039/d2sc02630a