Stereochemical modification of geminal dialkyl substituents on pantothenamides alters antimicrobial activity

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Hoegl, Annabelle
Darabi, Hamed
Tran, Elisa
Awuah, Emelia
Kerdo, Eleanor
Habib, Eric
Saliba, Kevin
Auclair, Karine

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Pergamon-Elsevier Ltd

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Pantothenamides are N-substituted pantothenate derivatives which are known to exert antimicrobial activity through interference with coenzyme A (CoA) biosynthesis or downstream CoA-utilizing proteins. A previous report has shown that replacement of the ProR methyl group of the benchmark N- pentylpantothenamide with an allyl group (R-anti configuration) yielded one of the most potent antibacterial pantothenamides reported so far (MIC of 3.2 μM for both sensitive and resistant Staphylococcus aureus). We describe herein a synthetic route for accessing the corresponding R-syn diastereomer using a key diastereoselective reduction with Baker's yeast, and report on the scope of this reaction for modified systems. Interestingly, whilst the R-anti diastereomer is the only one to show antibacterial activity, the R-syn isomer proved to be significantly more potent against the malaria parasite (IC50 of 2.4 ± 0.2 μM). Our research underlines the striking influence that stereochemistry has on the biological activity of pantothenamides, and may find utility in the study of various CoA-utilizing systems.

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Bioorganic and Medicinal Chemistry Letters

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2037-12-31