Abstract
We report the discovery through chemical synthesis of BT-33, a fluorinated macrobicyclic oxepanoprolinamide antibiotic. BT-33 potently inhibits the growth of multidrug-resistant clinical isolates of Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria and has an extended half-life in vivo relative to its predecessors cresomycin and iboxamycin. We report structure-activity relationships within the macrobicyclic substructure, which reveal structural features that are essential to the enhanced potency of BT-33 as well as its increased metabolic stability. We determine the structure of BT-33 in complex with the bacterial ribosome by X-ray crystallography, analysis of which suggests that the newly introduced fluorine atom makes an additional Van der Waals contact with nucleobase G2505. Finally, we show that the C7-methyl group of BT-33 rigidifies the macrocyclic ring in a conformation that is highly preorganized for ribosomal binding by using variable-temperature 1H-NMR experiments, density-functional theory calculations, and vibrational circular dichroism spectroscopy to compare macrobicyclic homologs of BT-33 and a C7-desmethyl analog.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supplementary information for: Discovery of a broad-spectrum, fluorinated macrobicyclic antibiotic through chemical synthesis
Description
Supplementary figures S1-S7, supplementary tables S1-S4, methods for the preparation of OPP analogs, X-ray structure report for intermediate 8, geometries and energies for DFT-Optimized Structures, and a catalog of NMR spectra
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