Scientists take steps to make weak TB drugs strong again
3-D structures could lead to more potent fluoroquinolones for the fight against other disease-causing bacteria too
January 19, 2016 - Biophysicists have discovered why the bacteria that cause tuberculosis (TB) are naturally somewhat resistant to antibiotics known as fluoroquinolones. Their findings, based on mapping the detailed three-dimensional structure of the drugs interacting with an essential enzyme in the TB germ, also reveal why some TB drugs are more potent than others and suggest how drug developers can make fluoroquinolones more efficacious against mutations that make the lung disease drug resistant.
Details of the research are reported in two papers to be
published the week of Jan. 18 in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
“Front-line treatments for TB are eroding rapidly as more
cases of multidrug-resistant TB arise worldwide,” says
James Berger, Ph.D., professor of biophysics and biophysical chemistry at the
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. “Our work
helps show that we need not — and indeed should not
— give up on fluoroquinolones, a longtime weapon in the
fight against disease-causing bacteria in general. We’ve
helped to identify several promising possibilities for
developing new versions of these drugs that might even work
against extensively drug-resistant TB.”
Quinolones are a commonly used class of synthetic,
broad-spectrum antibiotics that were first developed in the
early 1960s. By the 1970s, more potent fluoroquinolone
derivatives were made with the simple addition of a fluorine
atom to the base molecule. All quinolones, Berger notes, kill
bacteria in the same way, by gumming up the works of
the enzyme gyrase, which alters the
coiling of DNA
by breaking its strands and then resealing them. Quinolones
prevent resealing so that the bacterial DNA fall apart.
To better understand why some fluoroquinolones work better
clinically than others, Berger and his research team used a
high-powered imaging technique called
X-ray crystallography
to generate three-dimensional, atom-by-atom models of how
TB’s gyrase interacts with five different versions of the
drugs, including a newly synthesized one, 8-methyl-moxifloxacin.
Collaborators at Vanderbilt University also used a biochemical
test to monitor how various derivatives of the drugs caused
bacterial DNA to fall apart.
By viewing the “pocket” within gyrase where the
drugs sit, the research team says it saw that the drugs have the
potential to interact with the bacterial proteins at two
different sites. At one of these sites, the researchers
confirmed that a naturally swapped protein building block in
TB’s version of gyrase makes fluoroquinolones less
effective against TB than against other bacterial infections.
Surprisingly, none of the drugs latched on to the second site at
all.
According to Berger, this means there is untapped potential to
make fluoroquinolone derivatives that bind both sites and in
that way increase the drugs’ interactions with gyrase.
And, because bacteria, including those that cause TB, might
develop a mutation in one region but probably not both, Berger
says they would be less likely to become resistant to a drug
that strongly bound to both sites.
Most unexpectedly, though, the researchers say, they discovered
that the more potent versions of the drugs did not interact
strongly with either of the gyrase regions. Instead, their
increased effectiveness was due to strong interactions with the
broken DNA within the gyrase. When the researchers applied these
drugs to the gyrase enzyme in solution and then rinsed it out,
the more potent drugs remained stuck within the DNA-gyrase
complex, while the weaker ones washed away.
“This result means the fluoroquinolones aren’t
working in the most straightforward way, and that’s a
challenge for drug developers,” says Berger. “We
have to rethink the chemistry of these drugs, but doing so will
likely open up new avenues for improvements.”
One such improvement, based on increased interactions with DNA,
may already exist in the newly synthesized
8-methyl-moxifloxacin, created by University of Iowa chemist
Robert Kerns. When Berger’s team assessed the efficacy of
the five fluoroquinolones against two common mutant forms of the
TB gyrase, 8-methyl-moxifloxacin did better than the rest in
test tube studies, suggesting that it may also perform better
than related drugs against other drug-resistant bacteria.
“All together, these studies provide a wealth of
information that drug companies can use to continue the
development of fluoroquinolones,” says Berger. “They
hold a lot of promise for fighting drug resistance in bacteria
that cause TB and many other diseases.”
Though TB affects less than 10,000 people in the U.S., it is a
leading cause of death worldwide, according to the World Health
Organization, affecting 9.6 million people in 2014 and killing
1.5 million of them. Almost 500,000 of these cases are estimated
to be multidrug resistant, and fluoroquinolones are under
increasing investigation as a means to help counteract these
resistant strains.
Other authors of the report include Tim Blower of the Johns
Hopkins University School of Medicine (now an independent
researcher at Durham University); Benjamin Williamson of the
University of Iowa; and Katie Aldred and Neil Osheroff of
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine.
This work was supported by funding through the European
Molecular Biology Organization Long-Term Fellowship, the U.S.
Department of Veterans Affairs’ Merit Review Award (I01
Bx002198), the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases (R01 AI87671), the National Cancer Institute (R01
CA077373, T32 CA09582, ACB-12002), the National Institute of
General Medical Sciences (R01 GM033944, AGM-12006, P41
GM103403), the National Center for Research Resources (S10
RR029205) and the U.S. Department of Energy (DE-AC02-06CH11357).
Source:
Johns Hopkins Medicine