Author
Listed:
- Inna V. Krieger
(Texas A&M University)
- Paridhi Sukheja
(A Division of Scripps Research)
- Baiyuan Yang
(A Division of Scripps Research)
- Su Tang
(Texas A&M University)
- Daniel Selle
(Texas A&M University)
- Ashley Woods
(A Division of Scripps Research)
- Curtis Engelhart
(Weill Cornell Medicine)
- Pradeep Kumar
(Rutgers University
Rutgers University)
- Michael B. Harbut
(A Division of Scripps Research)
- Dongdong Liu
(A Division of Scripps Research)
- Brendan Tsuda
(A Division of Scripps Research)
- Bo Qin
(A Division of Scripps Research)
- Grant A. L. Bare
(The Scripps Research Institute)
- Gencheng Li
(The Scripps Research Institute)
- Victor Chi
(A Division of Scripps Research)
- Julian Gambacurta
(Trudeau Institute)
- Janine Hvizdos
(Trudeau Institute)
- Matthew Reagan
(Trudeau Institute)
- Isabelle L. Jones
(Trudeau Institute)
- Lisa M. Massoudi
(Colorado State University)
- Lisa K. Woolhiser
(Colorado State University)
- Alessandro Cascioferro
(A Division of Scripps Research)
- Erica Kundrick
(A Division of Scripps Research)
- Parul Singh
(Rutgers University
Rutgers University)
- William Reiley
(Trudeau Institute)
- Thomas R. Ioerger
(Texas A&M University)
- Dilipkumar Reddy Kandula
(AB Sciex LLC)
- Jacob W. McCabe
(AB Sciex LLC)
- Taijie Guo
(Shanghai Jiao Tong University)
- David Alland
(Rutgers University
Rutgers University)
- Helena I. Boshoff
(National Institutes of Health (NIH))
- Dirk Schnappinger
(Weill Cornell Medicine)
- Gregory T. Robertson
(Colorado State University)
- Khisi Mdluli
(Gates Medical Research Institute)
- Kyoung-Jin Lee
(A Division of Scripps Research)
- Jiajia Dong
(Shanghai Jiao Tong University)
- Shuangwei Li
(A Division of Scripps Research)
- Peter G. Schultz
(A Division of Scripps Research
The Scripps Research Institute)
- Sean B. Joseph
(A Division of Scripps Research)
- Melissa S. Love
(A Division of Scripps Research)
- K. Barry Sharpless
(The Scripps Research Institute)
- H. Michael Petrassi
(A Division of Scripps Research)
- Arnab K. Chatterjee
(A Division of Scripps Research)
- James C. Sacchettini
(Texas A&M University)
- Case W. McNamara
(A Division of Scripps Research)
Abstract
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) remains the world’s deadliest bacterial pathogen1. There is an urgent medical need to develop new drugs that shorten the treatment duration to combat widespread multi-drug-resistant and extensive-drug-resistant Mtb. Here, we present a preclinical covalent compound, CMX410, that contains an aryl fluorosulfate (SuFEx)2 warhead and uniquely targets the acyltransferase domain of Pks13, an essential enzyme in cell-wall biosynthesis. CMX410 is equipotent against drug-sensitive and drug-resistant strains of Mtb and efficacious in multiple mouse models of infection. Inhibition by CMX410 is irreversible through a previously undescribed mechanism: CMX410 reacts with the catalytic serine of the AT domain of Pks13, rapidly and irreversibly disabling the active site by forming a β-lactam. CMX410 is highly selective for its target and thus demonstrates excellent pharmacological and safety profiles, including no adverse effects in a 14-day rat toxicity study up to 1,000 mg kg−1 per day. The distinctive mode of action from current drugs, high potency across all tested clinical isolates, oral bioavailability, favourable performance in drug combination testing and superior pharmacological and safety characteristics make CMX410 a promising first-in-class candidate to replace outdated cell-wall biosynthesis inhibitors, such as isoniazid and ethambutol, in tuberculosis regimens.
Suggested Citation
Inna V. Krieger & Paridhi Sukheja & Baiyuan Yang & Su Tang & Daniel Selle & Ashley Woods & Curtis Engelhart & Pradeep Kumar & Michael B. Harbut & Dongdong Liu & Brendan Tsuda & Bo Qin & Grant A. L. Ba, 2025.
"SuFEx-based antitubercular compound irreversibly inhibits Pks13,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 645(8081), pages 755-763, September.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:645:y:2025:i:8081:d:10.1038_s41586-025-09286-3
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09286-3
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