Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) are multidrug-resistant pathogens for which new treatments are desperately needed. Carbapenemases and other types of antibiotic resistance genes are carried almost exclusively on large, low-copy-number plasmids (pCRE). Accordingly, small molecules that efficiently evict pCRE plasmids should restore much-needed treatment options. We therefore designed a high-throughput screen to identify such compounds. A synthetic plasmid was constructed containing the plasmid replication machinery from a representative Escherichia coli CRE isolate as well as a fluorescent reporter gene to easily monitor plasmid maintenance. The synthetic plasmid was then introduced into an E. coli K12 tolC host. We used this screening strain to test a library of over 12,000 known bioactive agents for molecules that selectively reduce plasmid levels relative to effects on bacterial growth. From 366 screen hits we further validated the antiplasmid activity of kasugamycin, an aminoglycoside; CGS 15943, a nucleoside analog; and Ro 90-7501, a bibenzimidazole. All three compounds exhibited significant antiplasmid activity including up to complete suppression of plasmid replication and/or plasmid eviction in multiple orthogonal readouts and potentiated activity of the carbapenem, meropenem, against a strain carrying the large, pCRE plasmid from which we constructed the synthetic screening plasmid. Additionally, we found kasugamycin and CGS 15943 blocked plasmid replication, respectively, by inhibiting expression or function of the plasmid replication initiation protein, RepE. In summary, we validated our approach to identify compounds that alter plasmid maintenance, confer resensitization to antimicrobials, and have specific mechanisms of action.
Publications by Year: 2020
2020
Two formal syntheses and one total synthesis of fostriecin (1) have been achieved, as well as, the synthesis of its related congener dihydro-dephospho-fostriecin. All the routes use the Sharpless dihydroxylation to set the absolute stereochemistry at C-8/9 positions and a Leighton allylation to set the C-5 position of the natural product. In the formal syntheses a Noyori transfer hydrogenation of an ynone was used to set the C-11 position while the total synthesis employed a combination of asymmetric dihydroxylation and Pd-π-allyl reduction to set the C-11 position. Finally in the total synthesis, a trans-hydroboration of the C-12/13 alkyne was used in combination with a Suzuki cross coupling to establish the Z,Z,E-triene of fostriecin (1).