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 |
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Format: | Artikel |
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. |
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ISSN: | 2041-6520 2041-6539 |
DOI: | 10.1039/d2sc02630a |