Polyfluorinated salicylic acid analogs do not interfere with siderophore biosynthesis.

TitlePolyfluorinated salicylic acid analogs do not interfere with siderophore biosynthesis.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsHegde P, Orimoloye MO, Sharma S, Engelhart CA, Schnappinger D, Aldrich CC
JournalTuberculosis (Edinb)
Volume140
Pagination102346
Date Published2023 May
ISSN1873-281X
KeywordsIron, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Salicylic Acid, Siderophores, Tandem Mass Spectrometry
Abstract

Tuberculosis (TB), caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) is a leading cause of infectious disease mortality. The salicylic acid derived small molecule siderophores known as mycobactins are essential in vivo for iron acquisition of Mtb where iron is restricted in the host. Herein, we synthesize and explore the mechanism of action of polyfluorinated salicylic acid derivates, which were previously reported to possess potent antimycobacterial activity. We hypothesized fluorinated salicylic acid derivates may inhibit mycobactin biosynthesis through initial bioactivation and conversion to downstream metabolites that block late steps in assembly of the mycobactins. Enzymatic studies demonstrated that some of the fluorinated salicylic acid derivatives compounds were readily activated by the bifunctional adenylating enzyme MbtA, responsible for incorporation of salicylic acid into the mycobactin biosynthetic pathway; however, they did not inhibit mycobactin biosynthesis as confirmed by LS-MS/MS using an authentic synthetic mycobactin standard. Further mechanistic analysis of the most active derivative (Sal-4) using an MbtA-overexpressing Mtb strain as well as complementation studies with iron and salicylic acid revealed Sal-4 cannot be antagonized by overexpression of MbtA or through supplementation with iron or salicylic acid. Taken together, our results indicate the observed antimycobacterial activity of polyfluorinated salicylic acid derivative is independent of mycobactin biosynthesis.

DOI10.1016/j.tube.2023.102346
Alternate JournalTuberculosis (Edinb)
PubMed ID37119793
PubMed Central IDPMC10247463
Grant ListR01 AI136445 / AI / NIAID NIH HHS / United States

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