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result(s) for
"beta-Lactams - chemical synthesis"
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Enantiomeric glycosylated cationic block co-beta-peptides eradicate Staphylococcus aureus biofilms and antibiotic-tolerant persisters
2019
The treatment of bacterial infections is hindered by the presence of biofilms and metabolically inactive persisters. Here, we report the synthesis of an enantiomeric block co-beta-peptide, poly(amido-D-glucose)-
block
-poly(beta-L-lysine), with high yield and purity by one-shot one-pot anionic-ring opening (co)polymerization. The co-beta-peptide is bactericidal against methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus
(MRSA), including replicating, biofilm and persister bacterial cells, and also disperses biofilm biomass. It is active towards community-acquired and hospital-associated MRSA strains which are resistant to multiple drugs including vancomycin and daptomycin. Its antibacterial activity is superior to that of vancomycin in MRSA mouse and human ex vivo skin infection models, with no acute in vivo toxicity in repeated dosing in mice at above therapeutic levels. The copolymer displays bacteria-activated surfactant-like properties, resulting from contact with the bacterial envelope. Our results indicate that this class of non-toxic molecule, effective against different bacterial sub-populations, has promising potential for the treatment of S.
aureus
infections.
The authors report the synthesis of an enantiomeric block co-beta-peptide that kills methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus
, including biofilm and persister bacterial cells, and disperses biofilms. The copolymer displays antibacterial activity in human ex vivo and mouse in vivo infection models without toxicity.
Journal Article
Fight Against Antimicrobial Resistance: We Always Need New Antibacterials but for Right Bacteria
by
Duval, Raphaël E.
,
Demoré, Béatrice
,
Grare, Marion
in
Acinetobacter baumannii - drug effects
,
Acinetobacter baumannii - pathogenicity
,
Acinetobacter baumannii - physiology
2019
Antimicrobial resistance in bacteria is frightening, especially resistance in Gram-negative Bacteria (GNB). In 2017, the World Health Organization (WHO) published a list of 12 bacteria that represent a threat to human health, and among these, a majority of GNB. Antibiotic resistance is a complex and relatively old phenomenon that is the consequence of several factors. The first factor is the vertiginous drop in research and development of new antibacterials. In fact, many companies simply stop this R&D activity. The finding is simple: there are enough antibiotics to treat the different types of infection that clinicians face. The second factor is the appearance and spread of resistant or even multidrug-resistant bacteria. For a long time, this situation remained rather confidential, almost anecdotal. It was not until the end of the 1980s that awareness emerged. It was the time of Vancomycin-Resistance Enterococci (VRE), and the threat of Vancomycin-Resistant MRSA (Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus). After this, there has been renewed interest but only in anti-Gram positive antibacterials. Today, the threat is GNB, and we have no new molecules with innovative mechanism of action to fight effectively against these bugs. However, the war against antimicrobial resistance is not lost. We must continue the fight, which requires a better knowledge of the mechanisms of action of anti-infectious agents and concomitantly the mechanisms of resistance of infectious agents.
Journal Article
A general catalytic β-C-H carbonylation of aliphatic amines to β-lactams
by
Chappell, Ben G. N.
,
Gaunt, Matthew J.
,
Willcox, Darren
in
Activation
,
Aliphatic amines
,
Amines
2016
Methods for the synthesis and functionalization of amines are intrinsically important to a variety of chemical applications. We present a general carbon-hydrogen bond activation process that combines readily available aliphatic amines and the feedstock gas carbon monoxide to form synthetically versatile value-added amide products. The operationally straightforward palladium-catalyzed process exploits a distinct reaction pathway, wherein a sterically hindered carboxylate ligand orchestrates an amine attack on a palladium anhydride to transform aliphatic amines into β-lactams. The reaction is successful with a wide range of secondary amines and can be used as a late-stage functionalization tactic to deliver advanced, highly functionalized amine products of utility for pharmaceutical research and other areas.
Journal Article
Exploring the Synthetic Potential of γ-Lactam Derivatives Obtained from a Multicomponent Reaction—Applications as Antiproliferative Agents
by
del Corte, Xabier
,
Martínez de Marigorta, Edorta
,
López-Francés, Adrián
in
Antineoplastic Agents - chemical synthesis
,
Antineoplastic Agents - pharmacology
,
antiproliferative effect
2022
A study on the reactivity of 3-amino α,β-unsaturated γ-lactam derivatives obtained from a multicomponent reaction is presented. Key features of the substrates are the presence of an endocyclic α,β-unsaturated amide moiety and an enamine functionality. Following different synthetic protocols, the functionalization at three different positions of the lactam core is achieved. In the presence of a soft base, under thermodynamic conditions, the functionalization at C-4 takes place where the substrates behave as enamines, while the use of a strong base, under kinetic conditions, leads to the formation of C-5-functionalized γ-lactams, in the presence of ethyl glyoxalate, through a highly diastereoselective vinylogous aldol reaction. Moreover, the nucleophilic addition of organometallic species allows the functionalization at C-3, through the imine tautomer, affording γ-lactams bearing tetrasubstituted stereocenters, where the substrates act as imine electrophiles. Taking into account the advantage of the presence of a chiral stereocenter in C-5 substituted γ-lactams, further diastereoselective transformations are also explored, leading to novel bicyclic substrates holding a fused γ and δ-lactam skeleton. Remarkably, an example of a highly stereoselective formal [3+3] cycloaddition reaction of chiral γ-lactam substrates is reported for the synthesis of 1,4-dihidropyridines, where a non-covalent attractive interaction of a carbonyl group with an electron-deficient arene seems to drive the stereoselectivity of the reaction to the exclusive formation of the cis isomer. In order to unambiguously determine the substitution pattern resulting from the diverse reactions, an extensive characterization of the substrates is detailed through 2D NMR and/or X-ray experiments. Likewise, applications of the substrates as antiproliferative agents against lung and ovarian cancer cells are also described.
Journal Article
Effect of Antimicrobial Consumption and Production Type on Antibacterial Resistance in the Bovine Respiratory and Digestive Tract
2016
The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between antimicrobial use and the occurrence of antimicrobial resistance in the digestive and respiratory tract in three different production systems of food producing animals. A longitudinal study was set up in 25 Belgian bovine herds (10 dairy, 10 beef, and 5 veal herds) for a 2 year monitoring of antimicrobial susceptibilities in E. coli and Pasteurellaceae retrieved from the rectum and the nasal cavity, respectively. During the first year of observation, the antimicrobial use was prospectively recorded on 15 of these farms (5 of each production type) and transformed into the treatment incidences according to the (animal) defined daily dose (TIADD) and (actually) used daily dose (TIUDD). Antimicrobial resistance rates of 4,174 E. coli (all herds) and 474 Pasteurellaceae (beef and veal herds only) isolates for 12 antimicrobial agents demonstrated large differences between intensively reared veal calves (abundant and inconstant) and more extensively reared dairy and beef cattle (sparse and relatively stable). Using linear mixed effect models, a strong relation was found between antimicrobial treatment incidences and resistance profiles of 1,639 E. coli strains (p<0.0001) and 309 Pasteurellaceae (p≤0.012). These results indicate that a high antimicrobial selection pressure, here found to be represented by low dosages of oral prophylactic and therapeutic group medication, converts not only the commensal microbiota from the digestive tract but also the opportunistic pathogenic bacteria in the respiratory tract into reservoirs of multi-resistance.
Journal Article
Cooperative catalysis by carbenes and Lewis acids in a highly stereoselective route to γ-lactams
by
Cardinal-David, Benoit
,
Holte, Dane
,
Scheidt, Karl A.
in
639/638/403
,
639/638/403/934
,
639/638/77
2010
Enzymes are a continuing source of inspiration for the design of new chemical reactions that proceed with efficiency, high selectivity and minimal waste. In many biochemical processes, different catalytic species, such as Lewis acids and bases, are involved in precisely orchestrated interactions to activate reactants simultaneously or sequentially. This type of ‘cooperative catalysis’, in which two or more catalytic cycles operate concurrently to achieve one overall transformation, has great potential in enhancing known reactivity and driving the development of new chemical reactions with high value. In this disclosure, a cooperative
N
-heterocyclic carbene/Lewis acid catalytic system promotes the addition of homoenolate equivalents to hydrazones, generating highly substituted γ-lactams in moderate to good yields and with high levels of diastereo- and enantioselectivity.
In nature, enzymes can orchestrate the combination of several different catalytic species, but mimicking this with synthetic catalysts is often problematic due to undesirable interactions between the catalysts. Here, an
N
-heterocyclic carbene and a Lewis acid cooperate to catalyse the efficient formation of γ-lactams.
Journal Article
Synthesis of 3-Amino-4-substituted Monocyclic ß-Lactams—Important Structural Motifs in Medicinal Chemistry
by
Strašek, Nika
,
Gobec, Stanislav
,
Grabrijan, Katarina
in
Anti-Bacterial Agents - pharmacology
,
Antibiotics
,
beta-Lactams - chemical synthesis
2021
Monocyclic ß-lactams (azetidin-2-ones) exhibit a wide range of biological activities, the most important of which are antibacterial, anticancer, and cholesterol absorption inhibitory activities. The synthesis of decorated monocyclic ß-lactams is challenging because their ring is highly constrained and consequently reactive, which is also an important determinant of their biological activity. We present the optimized synthesis of orthogonally protected 3-amino-4-substituted monocyclic ß-lactams. Among several possible synthetic approaches, Staudinger cycloaddition proved to be the most promising method for initial ring formation, yielding monocyclic ß-lactams with different substituents at the C-4 position, a phthalimido-protected 3-amino group, and a (dimethoxy)benzyl protected ring nitrogen. Challenging deprotection methods were then investigated. Oxidative cleavage with cerium ammonium nitrate and ammonia-free Birch reduction was found to be most effective for selective removal of ring nitrogen protection. Hydrazine hydrate was used for deprotection of the phthalimido group, and the procedure had to be modified by the addition of HCl in the case of aromatic substituents at the C-4 position. The presented methods and the synthesized 3-amino-4-substituted monocyclic ß-lactam derivatives are an important step toward new ß-lactams with potential pharmacological activities.
Journal Article
Highly functionalized β-lactams and 2-ketopiperazines as TRPM8 antagonists with antiallodynic activity
by
Roa, Ana María
,
Ferrer-Montiel, Antonio
,
Cuevas, Carmen
in
631/92
,
631/92/269
,
631/92/269/1153
2020
The cool sensor transient receptor potential melastatin channel 8 (TRPM8) is highly expressed in trigeminal and dorsal root ganglia, playing a key role in cold hypersensitivity associated to different peripheral neuropathies. Moreover, these channels are aberrantly expressed in different cancers, and seem to participate in tumor progression, survival and invasion. Accordingly, the search for potent and selective TRPM8 modulators attracted great interest in recent years. We describe new heterocyclic TRPM8 antagonist chemotypes derived from
N
-cloroalkyl phenylalaninol-Phe conjugates. The cyclization of these conjugates afforded highly substituted β-lactams and/or 2-ketopiperazine (KP) derivatives, with regioselectivity depending on the
N
-chloroalkyl group and the configuration. These derivatives behave as TRPM8 antagonists in the Ca
2+
microfluorometry assay, and confirmed electrophysiologically for the best enantiopure β-lactams
24a
and
29a
(IC
50
, 1.4 and 0.8 µM). Two putative binding sites by the pore zone, different from those found for typical agonists and antagonists, were identified by in silico studies for both β-lactams and KPs. β-Lactams
24a
and
29a
display antitumor activity in different human tumor cell lines (micromolar potencies, A549, HT29, PSN1), but correlation with TRPM8 expression could not be established. Additionally, compound
24a
significantly reduced cold allodynia in a mice model of oxaliplatin-induced peripheral neuropathy.
Journal Article
Synthesis and biochemical evaluation of new 3-amido-4-substituted monocyclic ß-lactams as inhibitors of penicillin-binding protein(s)
by
Zdovc, Irena
,
Krajnc, Alen
,
Proj, Matic
in
Anti-Bacterial Agents - chemical synthesis
,
Anti-Bacterial Agents - chemistry
,
Anti-Bacterial Agents - pharmacology
2024
In the final phases of bacterial cell wall synthesis, penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs) catalyze the cross-linking of peptidoglycan. For many decades, effective and non-toxic β-lactam antibiotics have been successfully used as mimetics of the d-Ala-d-Ala moiety of the natural substrate and employed as irreversible inhibitors of PBPs. In the years following their discovery, the emergence of resistant bacteria led to a decline in their clinical efficacy. Using Staudinger cycloaddition, we synthesized a focused library of novel monocyclic β-lactams in which different substituents were introduced at the C4 position of the β-lactam ring, at the C3 amino position, and at the N1 lactam nitrogen. In biochemical assays, the compounds were evaluated for their inhibitory effect on the model enzyme PBP1b from
. Upon investigation of the antibacterial activity of the newly prepared compounds against ESKAPE pathogens, some compounds showed moderate inhibition. We also examined their reactivity and selectivity in a biochemical assay with other enzymes that have a catalytic serine in the active site, such as human cholinesterases, where they also showed no inhibitory activity, highlighting their specificity for bacterial targets. These compounds form the basis for further work on new monocyclic β-lactams with improved antibacterial activity.
Journal Article
Azetidin-2-ones, Synthon for Biologically Important Compounds
by
D. Krishnaswamy
,
Vidyesh Govande
,
B. Bhawal
in
Amino acids
,
Antibiotics
,
Azetidines - chemical synthesis
2004
Azetidin-2-one, a four-membered cyclic lactam (β-lactam) skeleton has been recognised as a useful building block for the synthesis of a large number of organic molecules by exploiting the strain energy associated with it, in addition to its use in the synthesis of a variety of β-lactam antibiotics. Efforts have been made in exploring such new aspects of β-lactam chemistry using enantiomerically pure β-lactams as versatile intermediates for the synthesis of aromatic β-amino acids and their derivatives, peptides, polyamines, polyamino alcohols, amino sugars and polyamino ethers. The development of methodologies based on β- lactam nucleus is now referred as the β-lactam synthon methods. The selective bond cleavage of the strained ring coupled with further interesting transformation render this fascinating molecule as a powerful building block. This provides an access to diverse structural type of synthetic target molecules lacking β-lactam ring structure. This review provides an account of synthesis of organic compounds having biological significance at the same time lacking β-lactam ring, by using β-lactam as synthon.
Journal Article