Structure-guided design of novel thiazolidine inhibitors of O-acetyl serine sulfhydrylase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
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| Abstract |    :  
                  The cysteine biosynthetic pathway is absent in humans but essential in microbial pathogens, suggesting that it provides potential targets for the development of novel antibacterial compounds. CysK1 is a pyridoxalphosphate-dependent O-acetyl sulfhydrylase, which catalyzes the formation of l-cysteine from O-acetyl serine and hydrogen sulfide. Here we report nanomolar thiazolidine inhibitors of Mycobacterium tuberculosis CysK1 developed by rational inhibitor design. The thiazolidine compounds were discovered using the crystal structure of a CysK1-peptide inhibitor complex as template. Pharmacophore modeling and subsequent in vitro screening resulted in an initial hit compound 2 (IC50 of 103.8 nM), which was subsequently optimized by a combination of protein crystallography, modeling, and synthetic chemistry. Hit expansion of 2 by chemical synthesis led to improved thiazolidine inhibitors with an IC50 value of 19 nM for the best compound, a 150-fold higher potency than the natural peptide inhibitor (IC50 2.9 μM).  | 
        
| Year of Publication |    :  
                  2013 
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| Journal |    :  
                  Journal of medicinal chemistry 
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| Volume |    :  
                  56 
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| Issue |    :  
                  16 
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| Number of Pages |    :  
                  6457-66 
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| Date Published |    :  
                  2013 
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| ISSN Number |    :  
                  0022-2623 
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| URL |    :  
                  https://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jm400710k 
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| DOI |    :  
                  10.1021/jm400710k 
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| Short Title |    :  
                  J Med Chem 
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