Multiple Action-Based Design Approaches to Antibacterials by John Bremner

Multiple Action-Based Design Approaches to Antibacterials by John Bremner

Author:John Bremner
Language: eng
Format: epub, pdf
ISBN: 9789811609992
Publisher: Springer Singapore


Berberine has moderate antibacterial activity by inhibiting the assembly of FtsZ, as do berberine analogues (Mori-Quiroz et al. 2018). In this paper the authors also indicate de novo synthesis of berberine analogues is underway and this represents an alternative approach to chemical modifications of berberine and related isoquinolinium alkaloids for SAR studies. Worth considering both approaches. The design of berberine-based FtsZ inhibitors which have broad spectrum antibacterial activity has also been reported by Sun et al. (2014). Two binding sites on FtsZ were found with one being the C-terminal interdomain cleft and the other the GTP-binding site. The potential for a number of FtsZ binding sites was also revealed in an in silico analysis by Kusuma et al. 2019 (Kusuma et al. 2019). Continuing this theme, an important recent review by Casiraghi et al. (2020) has summarized a range of FtsZ inhibitors classifying them according to their main protein binding sites, which is very useful from a medicinal chemistry perspective in enabling some future design ideas with respect to targeting a number of the protein sites.

Berberine can be demethylated in high yield to the corresponding 9-hydroxy analogue berberrubine, a compound which, although classified as an alkaloid, is usually an artifact of isolation from plant sources (Grycová et al. 2007). Other substituted berberines can also undergo this thermal demethylation process. The demethylation can be accomplished by straightforward thermolysis (Lo et al. 2013) providing a convenient hook for the attachment of further groups by reaction at the 9-OH site produced (Li et al. 2010). The 9-hydroxyl group can also possibly serve to direct further nucleophilic attack, for example by boronic acids in a Petasis type reaction (Guerrera and Ryder 2016) (Guerrera and Ryder 2016), to afford 8-substituted derivatives of the type shown in Fig. 3.22c and d. For systems of the latter type, standard azide-based click chemistry (Thirumurugan et al. 2013) could then be used to attach a unit with the recognition element C as in Fig. 3.22e.

While berberrubine itself displays only weak to very weak antibacterial activity against the Gram-positives Micrococcus luteus (Kim et al. 2002) and Mycobacterium smegmatis (Gharbo et al. 1973) greater potency through increased target interaction possibilities may result from conversion of the phenolic hydroxyl group at C9 in both compounds Fig. 3.22c and e to the fluorosulfate group using SuFEx click chemistry (Liu et al. 2018). Toxicity considerations in the handling of the initially required gaseous reagent for this reaction, sulfuryl fluoride, has been mitigated by the introduction of fluorosulfuryl imidazolium salts which are bench-stable and act as alternative donors of the ‘F–O2S+’ unit. An excellent detailed review of SuFEx chemistry and applications in late-stage functionalization strategies for bioactive compounds has been published recently by Barrow et al. (2019). The introduced SO2F group is also a useful handle to add other pharmacophores.

Another valuable reaction of berberine and congeners is the direct introduction of secondary amino functionality at the 9-position by an aromatic nucleophilic displacement reaction with primary amines. Although yields were moderate in the case of palmatine,



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