Structure Activity Relationship
Structure Activity Relationship
Agents
Structure
Activity Relationships
André Bryskier MD
Antibacterial
Agents – Benzyl pyrimidines
– Sulphonamides
– Sulfones
– Furans
– 4-quinolones
Synthetic compounds – Oxazolidinones
– Nitroxoline
– Penem
– Fosfomycin
– Anti-TB
Antibiotic resistance
Pre antibiotic
1941 era
Antibiotic
2000 era
3
Research in anti-infectives
4
Purification e.g Penicillin G
Erythromycin A
Kanamycin
Semi synthetic
ß-lactams
Macrolides
Aminoglycosides
5
Structure-Activity-Relationships
WHY
Optimization of existing
Alterations non-antibacterials
chemical structures
7
Improvement of physicochemical properties
N N
(1)
N N
H H3C
8
Improvement of physicochemical properties
Amino acid
Amino acid
N N
H2 N N
S R H S
F
Nalidixic acid Oxolinic acid 6
Fluoroquinolones
(1962) (quinoline)
Flumequine
7
Piromedic acid
N
N Auxopharmacophore :
fused aromatic ring
appended substituents
R1
12
Fluoroquinolones
COOH
(CH3)2N
N
Ro 13-5478
Monocyclic derivative
13
Fluoroquinolones
Structure - activity relationships
Classification
Microbiology
Pharmacokinetics
Adverse events
14
Fluoroquinolones
Classifications
Chemical classification
Biological classification
15
Fluoroquinolones
Chemical classification
Group I Group II Group III Group IV
Monocyclic derivatives Bicyclic derivatives Tricyclic derivatives Tetracyclic derivatives
Ro-145478 Ro-149578
KB-5246
Group II B Group II A Group IIC III A III B
No fluor 6-Fluor
Pipemidic acid
Nalidixic Piromedic acid
acid 7-piperazinyl 7-pyrrolidinyl Other
Enoxacin AT 3295 BMY 40062
A-57132 AT 3765 E-3499
Tosufloxacin Trovafloxacin
A-65485 Ecenofloxacin
BMY 43738 CP 99433
BMY 41802
U-91939E
PD 131112 (Cl 990)
Gemifloxacin
DC-756
17
Fluoroquinolones
Chemical classification - Bicyclic derivatives
Group II
O
R1 R2
F COOH
Flumequine CH3 H
R1
Verbufloxacin CH3
N
19
Fluoroquinolones
Tricyclic derivatives
O
R1 R2
F COOH
Ofloxacin 4’-methyl piperazinyl
20
Fluoroquinolones
O
F COOH
R7 X8 N1
R
7-position
R5 O
R6 COOH
R7 X8 N
R1
Substituents at position 8
22
Fluoroquinolones
R6 COOH
R7 X N
R1
Substituents at N-
N -1
Ethyl Fluoro ethyl Cyclopropyl Fluorophenyl Difluorophenyl Methyl amino t-butyl Oxetane
(C2 H5 ) (C2 H4F) (c-C3 H5 ) (4'F -C3H 5) (2',4'-F-C3H 5) (NH-CH3)
23
Fluoroquinolones
R5 O Substituents at C-5
24
Fluoroquinolones
Prodrugs
O
F COOH
R7 N N
R1
R1 R7 R’-aminoacid
HN R’
N N
+++ + +
H2N
26
Fluoroquinolones
Enantiomers
O
F COOH
N O
H3C H
27
Fluoroquinolones
Co drugs
COOH
O
NH2
O
F COO N O N
C S
S N C
N N H
N Ro 23-9484
N F OCH3
H3C
OH
NH
N FCE 26600
S
O
N
O
HOOC O O
28
Antibacterial activity
Fluoroquinolones
Antibacterial activity
Antibacterial
activity
R5 O Fixation sites
Antibacterial spectrum R7 X8 N
R1 Global antibacterial
activity
Anaerobes
30
Fluoroquinolones
Antibacterial activity
R5 O
C-6 fluorine
(5)
F (6)
COOH
7-substituent
N-1 substituent
R7
(7)
X8 N C-5 substituent
(1)
(8)
C-8 substituent
R1
31
Fluoroquinolones
Antibacterial activity
4
COOH Minimal requirement
3 . double bond in 2-3 must be reduced
. free ketone in position 4
2 . free carboxylic group in position 3
N1 . N-1 has to be substituted
R1
32
Fluoroquinolones
Antibacterial activity
R5
R7
33
Fluoroquinolones
Antibacterial activity
R5 N (piperazinyl)
N
F R
Best moiety against Gram-negative bacteria
C7
H2N
R7 X8
N (pyrrolidinyl)
34
Fluoroquinolones
Antibacterial activity
O
COOH
N1 N1
R1
Fluorocyclopropyl Cyclopropyl > 2’4’ difluorophenyl > t-butyl > oxetane > butyl > ethyl
F C2H 5
R5
36
Fluoroquinolones
Antibacterial activity
37
Fluoroquinolones
Extend the antibacterial activity
S. pneumoniae M. tuberculosis
MRSA H. pylori
38
Fluoroquinolones
Targeted indications mycobacteria
Mycobacteria
Structure
- activity relationships have been
extensively study
Mycobacteria F
COOH
R7 X N
R1
MIC (mg/l)
R1 X R7 M. fortuitum M. tuberculosis
PD 163753 Cyclopropyl C-Br 3'-methyl piperazinyl ≤ 0.03 0.76
PD 161144 Cyclopropyl C-OCH3 4'-ethyl ≤ 0.03 0.39
PD 163048 tert –butyl N 3'-methyl piperazinyl 0.03 0.78
PD 163049 tert –butyl N 3', 5' dimethyl piperazinyl 0.03 0.78
PD 161148 Cyclopropyl C-OCH3 3'-ethyl piperazinyl 0.03 0.10
Ciprofloxacin Cyclopropyl CH2 piperazinyl 0.06 0.25
Sparfloxacin Cyclopropyl C-F 3', 5' dimethyl piperazinyl 0.06 0.06
40
Fluoroquinolones
Targeted indications H. pylori
Two compounds
Natural compounds
Y-34967
41
Fluoroquinolones
Targeted indications H. pylori
In vitro activity - H. pylori
MIC50 (mg/l)
Y-34867 0.025
O
Levofloxacin 0.39
F COOH Sparfloxacin 0.20
Amoxicillin 0.012
N N Clarithromycin 0.025
O OCH3
In vivo (murine infection - H. pylori 1907)
CH3
N MIC Dose Clearance
CH3
(mg/l) (mg/kg bid day 7) (%)
Control - - 0
Y-34867
Y-34867 0.025 3 100
10 100
Amoxicillin 0.39 30 100
Clarithromycin 0.05 30 0
100 80
7 7
X3
N R1 N N
N
X1
R2
X2
S. pneumoniae
43
Respiratory Quinolones
S. pneumoniae
- +
Ciprofloxacin Levofloxacin
Norfloxacin Moxifloxacin
Lomefloxacin Gatifloxacin
Pefloxacin Sitafloxacin
Ofloxacin Gemifloxacin
Enoxacin Garenofloxacin
Fleroxacin
44
Pharmacokinetics
Fluoroquinolones
Pharmacokinetics
R5 O
C-8 substituent
F COOH
C-7 substituent
R7 X8 N
R1
46
Fluoroquinolones
Pharmacokinetics
R5 O
F COOH
R7 X8 N
R1
47
Fluoroquinolones
Pharmacokinetics
O O
Reduce oral absorption
O
OH
(interactions with antiacids, milk...)
C3 divalent cations : Ca++, Fe++, Zn++
N
C3
R1
48
Metal cations, antacids, anti-ulcers
Cation
R5 O O
R6
3 OH
4
R7 N
R1
50
Fluoroquinolones
Pharmacokinetics
R5
C8
R7 X8
51
Fluoroquinolones
Pharmacokinetics
N N
or
HN N
H3C
C7 metabolism
CH3 CH3
52
Adverse events
Fluoroquinolones
Adverse events
Phototoxicity
Specific CNS
Cutaneous rash Minor Adverse QTc prolongation
Gastric pain events events Tendinopathies
Diarrhea Hypoglycemia
Hepatic injuries
Urticaria
54
Fluoroquinolones
Adverse events
R5 O
C-7 substituent
F COOH
C-8 substituent
N-1 substituent
R7 X8 N
R1
55
Fluoroquinolones
Adverse events
R5
56
Fluoroquinolones
Adverse events
R5
F Phototoxicity
C-F > C-Cl > N > CH > C-OCH3, C-CF
X8 Genetic toxicity
C-F > C-Cl > C-OCH3 > N > CH
R7 X8
Water solubility
57
Fluoroquinolones
Adverse events
COOH
Control theophylline
N1 cyclopropyl > ethyl > 2’,4’-difluorophenyl > C2H4F
Genetic toxicity
N1 cyclopropyl = t-butyl > 2.4’- difluorophenyl > ethyl
R1
58
Fluoroquinolones
Adverse events
N-1 - - + + -
C-5 + - + - -
C-6 - - - - -
C-7 - ++ ++ + ++
X-8 ++ ++ ++ - -
59
Fluoroquinolones
Clastogenicity
60
Fluoroquinolones
Topoisomerase II activity
ID50 (mg/l)
Compound DNA gyrase from E. coli KL-16 topoisomerase II from thymus
Ofloxacin 0.76 1870
Ciprofloxacin 0.13 155
Levofloxacin 0.78 280
Enoxacin 1.72 93
Merafloxacin 3.55 64
Nalidixic acid 23.00 325
61
Fluoroquinolones
Affinity for GABA receptors
R IC50 (M)
O
H > 10-3
F COOH HN N 1.8 x 10-5
N > 10-3
62
GABA receptors
IC50 (M)
Without NSAID 4-biphenylacetate
Norfloxacin 1.4 x 10-5 < 10-8
Enoxacin 1.4 x 10-4 1.1 x 10-7
Ofloxacin 1.0 x 10-3 8.3 x 10-7
Ciprofloxacin 7.6 x 10-5 3.0 x 10-8
Tosufloxacin 5.7 x 10-4 1.2 x 10-4
Fleroxacin 7.6 x 10-4 1.0 x 10-4
Sparfloxacin 9.1 x 10-4 5.2 x 10-5
Levofloxacin > 10-3 3.5 x 10-4
Sitafloxacin 1.0 x 10-3 3.6 x 10-4
BAY y 3118 > 10-3 2.2 x 10-4
63 Affinity for the GABA receptor of fluoroquinolones Adapted from HORI
Fluoroquinolones
Phototoxicity
Substituents Phototoxicity
C-F +
C-Cl
8 N
R7 X N
C-H
Chemical structure
R1 C-F
C-OCH3 -
65
Phototoxicity
? Method :
ear swelling of mice after UV-A irradiation and quinolone administration
O
X Dose (mg/kg) N Inflammation
F COOH O-CH3 200 6 0/6
800 6 0/6
8
8-F 3.1 6 0/6
N X N 12.5 6 3/6
50 6 5/6
-H 8 50 6 0/6
CH3 200 6 6/6
800 6 6/6
Mice SKH-1 (hairless) - 1.5 hours / day of 25 J/cm2 of UV-A for 78 weeks
67
Fluoroquinolones
Mutagenicity
O
F COOH
H3C N N N
O R1
R2
ID50 (mg/l)
Compound R1 R2 MIC (µg/ml) DNA gyrase topoisomerase II
68
Fluoroquinolones
Toxicity-tolerance : cardiotoxicity
R5 O
R6 COOH
R8 X8 N
R1
69
Fluoroquinolones and QTc effect in humans
N
<1
O
N
HN 2
N
H3C CO N 6
71
Conclusion
Fluoroquinolones
Difficult to predict
Increased difficulties in synthesis
Tolerance
Medical need
Overcome ciprofloxacin resistance
(S. aureus, P. aeruginosa....)
New concept
Targeted clinical indication : e.g ....
(Helicobacter pylori, mycobacteria)
73
Fluoroquinolones
Expand the clinical indications
Intra abdominal
infections
74
Fluoroquinolones
Future - New avenues
OH
N
HN
OCHF 2
H3C
76
ß-lactams
77
ß-lactam
Classification
OH
R1
Penems
N
O
COOH
H H H
R1 N R N R1 N
X
N N N
O R2 O O
COOH
N
O R2
COOH
Cephems
78
ß-lactam
Penams
Group I Group II Group III Group IV Group V Group VI Group VII Oxi imino
penicillin
Penicillin G Penicillin M 6-α-OH-penicillin α carboxy Amidino Oxi imino BRL 44154
penicillins penicillin penicillin
IIA Temocillin
Carbenicillin Mecillinam BRL 44154
IIB Ticarcillin
Ampicillin Sulbenicillin
Amoxicillin N-acyl penicillins
Azlocillin
Mezlocillin
Piperacillin
Apalcillin
79
Cephems
Cephalosporin C
81
Cephems
Wave of parenteral cephems
-
7 ACA (1960)
Cephalothin
Cephaloridine
(1964)
82
Cephems
Classification
Chemical classification (1) - Modification of the ring
H
R2 N X1 X1
Cephalosporin S
N
O R Oxacephems O
Carbacephems CH3
COOH
H
R2 N X1
X1
-iso-2 cephalosporin S
N
O R -iso-3 oxacephems O
CH3
COOH
83
Cephems
Discovery of cephalosporin
Cephalosporin C (1953)
Hydrolysis
84
Cephems
Classification
Chemical classification (2) - Modification substituents
H OCH3 H NHCHO
R N S R1 N S
N N
O R2 O R2
COOH COOH
Cephamycins Cephabicins
H
R1 N S
Aryl — CH2 —
R1 Aryl — CH —
N ¦
O R X
Aryl — CH
COOH ¦
Cephalosporins X—R
85
Cephems
Microbiological classification
86
Group I : Cephalothin, cephaloridine
87
Group I : Cephems
N+ Cephaloridine
N R
N N
Cefazolin
COOH
S CH3
S
88
Cephems
Group II
Increase stability to ß
- lactamase hydrolysis.
89
Cephems - Group II
H
H
R N
Cephalosporins N
O
CH3
H
R N
Cephamycins N
O
90
Group II-Cephems
Cephem
Cefuroxime was the first derivative with an oxime side-chain.
C CO N S
H
N
O N
OCH3
O R
COOH
91
Cephems - Group II
In vitro activity
MIC (mg/l)
Cefuroxime Cefamandole Cefoxitin
92
Group III - cephems
Cephems which belong to group III have two or more of the following
characteristics
. 2-amino-5-thiazolyl ring
N
H2N
S
93
Group III - cephems
N C CO
N
H2N
S O R
94
Group III - cephems
S R R
Ceftizoxime -H
N
R Cefotaxime -CH3OCOCH3
OH
COO- Na- N
Ceftriaxone Cefodizime
CH2COOH
O S
C3 Side
- chain N N N
Cefuzonam
Cefmenoxime N N
S S
N S
CH3
95
Cephems
Group III - Five subgroups A to E
Group III
96
Cephems - Group III
Chemical modifications
C-7 oxime side-chain
N
OR Other
— CH3 OH
97
Cephems - Group III
Chemical modifications
N
O OCH3 N
O
N
O CH2 S N N
COOH N
N
CH3
98
Cephems - Group III
Chemical innovation
- 7moiety
C
N N
N
H2N H2N
S S
99
Cephems - Group III
Chemical structure
Innovation
2-amino 5-thiazolyl ring
+ Oxime side-chain
H2N
S O
N
O R
100
Group III - cephems
Evolution
101
Group III - cephems
Improve the antibacterial activity
MIC (mg/l)
Cefamandole Cefotaxime
102
Group III - cephems
Long-acting cephem : ceftriaxone
H3C N OH
N
35
O N O
H3C N OCH3
N
12
O N O
H3C N
N
10
O N O
H3C N O
N
10
O N O
103
Cefodizime
Structure-activity-relationships (pharmacokinetics)
MIC (mg/l)
T ½ (h) AUC (mg.h/l)
N CH3 COOH
0.27 8.5
S
0.31 1.8
S
CH3 COOH
N
0.52 15.2
CH3
S
CH3
N
1.28 40.7
CH3 COOH
S
Cefodizime
104
Group III - cephems
Cephalosporin BRM : cefodizime
H CH3
N C CO N S
N
N
S OCH3 N S
O CH3COONa +
S
COONa +
105
Cephems
Group III - oxa-1 -cephem
R1 R2
OCH3
R1 CO N
O
Latamoxef O CH -CH3
H COOH
N N
106
Cephems
Group III - oxa-1 -cephem
107
Cephems - Group IV
108
Cephems
Group IV - Definition
109
Cephems
Group IV - Antibacterial activity
Mechanism of action
Hydrolysis by ESBL.
110
Cephems
Group IV - Classification
C-3 C-7
2-Amino-5-thiazolyl 5-Amino-2-thiadiazolyl
111
Cephems - Group VI
- 3quaternary ammonium cephem
C
are zwitterionic compounds
H
N C CO N O
N
H2N
S R N N+
O
COO-
112
Cephems - Group IV
Mechanism of action
113
Cephems
Group IV - Weaknesses
Hydrolysis by ESBL
Variable activity against P. aeruginosa
Short elimination half- life (≈ 2 hours).
114
Cephems
Group V
115
Cephems - Group V
Chemical modification
HO OH
N
OH
R
CH3 O
OH
116
Cephems
Group V - Classification
Cephems
Catecholes Hydroxypyridones
Group V-1 Group V-2
N O
H2N
H
S N S
N
N N+
O O O
HO O O-
Staphylococcus spp
OH
ß-lactamases
F OH
P. aeruginosa
Pharmacokinetics
118
Cephems - Group V
Antibacterial activity
. overcome ESBL
. original additional mechanism of action :
Fe2+ chelation.
Wearknesses
. metabolism
. tolerance (?)
. cost of production.
119
Cephems - Group VI
Investigations
. In vitro .... MIC
. Bactericidal activity
. Affinity for PBP2a
. In vivo
120
Cephems - Group VI
VA VB
Cefsulodin RWJ
RWJ
BAL 9141
LY
CP
TAK-599
121
Cephems - Group VI
Cefsulodin
. Dianionic compound : derived from sulbenicillin
Anti pseudomonal activity
CH CO N
S
H
SO3-
N N+ CO NH2
O
COO-
122
Cephems group VI
Cephems Group VI
VIA VIB
(antipseudomonal) (anti-MRSA)
O
N
H
N S X
LY 274858 CH3
O
N O N
O X O
S N
H2N
O O-Na+
124
Cephems - Group VI
Antibacterial activity
125
Cephems
Pharmacokinetics classification (1)
126
Cephems
Pharmacokinetics classification
Cephems T 1/2 (h)
N N
N N
CH3????? CH3?????
?????????? ??????????
128
Cephems - Group VI
Conclusion
Ü S. aureus peni-R
Ü Gram-negative bacilli
Ü MRSA
129
Penems
Penem
OH
S
Synthetic compounds
H3 C
H Antibacterial agents
N
O - lactams.
ß
COOH
131
Penem
Classification
X
Group I Group II Group III
X
H3C
R
N
O
COOH
133
Penem
Synthetic compounds
New compounds
134
Penem
R
SCH 29482 -S-C2H5
SCH 34343 -S-C2H4OCONH2
S
Sulopenem S+
-
OH O
S
Zeneca derivatives
NH
S
H3C HR 664 O CONH 2
R
CGP 31608 -CH2-NH2
N
O Ritipenem -CH2OCONH2
FCE 21420 -CH2OCOCH3
COOH
FCE 24964 -CH2OCH3
Faropenem
O
H
N
TMA 3176
CH N+
FCE 24362
135
Penem
136
Penem
Structure-activity
OH
Antibacterial activity
S
H3C
H
N
O
COOH
ß-lactamase stability
137
Penem
Structure-activity
138
Penem
Hydrolysis by DHP-1
OH
H H OH
H3C
S
HOOC N
OH
COOH
S
H3C DHP-1 M1 (SUN 9609)
N O Lung, kidney
O H (dog, human)
OH
COOH
H
OH
H3C
S
Hydrolytic site
HOOC N
COOH
M2 (SUN 9608)
139
Penem
Dioxolenone ester : metabolism
COO
CH3-CO-CO-CH3
O O
diacetyl
O
Gastro intestinal tract/liver
CH3COH-CO-CH3
acetoine
Liver
CH3COH-COH-CH3
2, 3 butenadiol
140
Penem
141
Macrolides
Macrolides
1st Erythromycin A
Oleandomycin • S. aureus peni-R
Spiramycin
• Overcome resistance
3d Ketolides to erythromycin A
• Enhance activity against
Gram-positive bacteria
143
Macrolides
Target
Increase absorption
Good stability in acid conditions
No enhancement of in vitro activity against common
pathogens
Increase in vitro activity against atypical pathogens.
144
Macrolide
145
Macrolide
Erythromycin A
O
H3C CH3
9
8
11
HO OH
12
OH 6
CH3
H3C
H3C O
O
CH3
CH3
O
O O CH3
CH3 N CH3
OH O
OH
CH3
O CH3
CH3
146
Macrolide
O OH
H H
H3C CH3 H3C CH3 H3C CH3
9 [H+] 9 [H+]
8 8
O
7
CH3 CH3 CH3
7
6 6
HO O H2O
147
Macrolide
Concentrations (plasma)
2'-propionyl 69 247
2'-ethylsuccinyl 39 60
2'-acethyl 39 170
2'-butyryl 188 353
2'-valeryl 492 478
148
Macrolide
Erythromycin A Anhydroerythromycin A
149
Macrolide
Weak and link points of erythronolide A
H3C
150
Macrolide
O
F
H3C
8 CH3
HO
HO OH
6
H3C CH3
Flurithromycin
O O O
R
other
151
Macrolide
Semisynthetic derivatives of 9 -erythromycin A
OR
H3C N
N
9a
9
alkylation
azalide
O R
9
reduction NH2
9
intermediate synthesis
derivative
(9-oxime)
erythromycylamine
O
weak point
9
erythromycin A dirithromycin
152
Macrolide
O O CH3
N O
CH3
H3C CH3
H3C O(CH2 )2 O CH2
N
8
9
O HO OH
10
11
OH
H3C CH3
H3C O
Dirithromycin O
CH3
CH3
O O O
CH3
CH3 H3C
N CH3
H2N OH O
9
CH3 O
HO O CH3
10
11
CH3
Erythromycylamin
Roxithromycin
153
Macrolide
CH3 H3C
H3C CH3
N
N
HO
R H3C CH3
O CH3
CH3 CH3 CH3 O
HO
R HO
N
O 8a HO
9
N
9a
H3C CH3
O O OCH3
CH3
Erythromycin A 9a-azalide 8a-azalide CH3 CH3
O
OH
O
CH3
Azithromycin
154
Macrolide
CH3
X N-10-methyl azalide
X=H
R R = CH3
N
Lactam
X=O
R=H
155
Macrolide
CH3 CH3
OCH3 OCH3
H3C H3C
HO CH3 [H+ ] (translactonisation) CH3
O
HO
H3C H3C
Clarithromycin Pseudoclarithromycin
156
Macrolide
H3C H3C
N N
O-Desosamine O-Desosamine
HO HO
[H+ ]
O CH3
O OH
L-cladinose cleavage
OH
O
CH3
Azithromycin CP 66458
157
Macrolide
2'-esters erythromycin A
OCH3
CH3
2'-ester R Sale
5
D-desosamine
158
Ketolides
Ketolides
Definition
160
ketolides
Third
wave Target
of molecules
161
ketolides
Target
162
Bacterial resistance to antibacterials
Co-trimoxazole
Rifampicin
Macrolides
Tetracycline
Lincosamides
Chloramphenicol
Streptogramins
163
Spread of bacterial resistance
165
Ketolides
Natural ketolides
O O
CH3 C H3
HO CH3 CH 3
6 6
H 3C
H3C H 3C
O O
3 3
O O
O O
O O
O O
CH3 CH 3
N NZ
OH OH
Picromycin Narbomycin
166
Ketolides
Picromycin 14-membered
Narbomycin 15-membered
Telithromycin
HMR 3004
GW 581506X Cethromycin
HMR 3562
HMR 3787
HMR 3832
TE-802
TE-810
167 CP 654743
Ketolides
Telithromycin
HMR 3004
HMR 3787 Aventis Pharma
3
HMR 3832
O-cladinose HMR 3562
Cethromycin Abbott
168
Ketolides
169
-
3 KETO FUNCTION
170
Ketolides
3 3 3
O
cladinose OH
O (= ketolide)
- keto
3
removal Oxidation
171
Ketolides
3-keto function
172
Stability in acidic environment
80
% of activity
60
40
20 Azithromycin
Clarithromycin
0
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 Time (h)
173
Interaction with human
motilin receptor
174
No inducer of MLSB resistance
1.2 1.2
1.0 1.0
0.8 0.8
0.6 0.6
0.4 0.4
N N
O N O N
N H3C CH3 N
H3C CH3
C C
O O
N
O
CH3
CH 3
Telithromycin N
O CH3
CH3
H3C H3C
O
O
O H3C
O
O
O H3C
RU 69874
OH OH
CH3 CH3
O O
O O O
O CH3 CH3
CH3 N
H3C N
CH3 H3C
CH3 HO O CH3
175 OCH3
C11
- C12 carbamate residue
176
Bacterial resistance to antibacterials
Co-trimoxazole
Rifampicin
Macrolides
Tetracycline
Lincosamides
Chloramphenicol
Streptogramins
177
Clarithromycin...
...carbamates analogues
R
A-61795 H
N
A-62514
H
O N
A-66173 H
N R
N
A-66005
O
N
A-64239
CH2
A-66321
178
Spread of bacterial resistance
Carbamate residue
In vitro activity
Pharmacokinetics
O
Pharmacodynamics R
Intracellular kinetics N
11
O
12
Efflux O
Mechanism of action
Tolerance- toxicity.
180
Research in anti-infectives
N
11
C11 – C12 O 12
Optimisation
carbamate ketolide O
R
N
11
Substituted O Innovation
12
carbamate ketolide O
181
pyridyll
imidazolyl
N
N
butyl
N
R C
N N
11 11
O
12
O
12
telithromycin
O O
Carbamate ketolide
182
Ketolides
C11- C12 carbamate substituted side chain
Imidazolyl
Quinoline ring ring
O O N
N
CH HC CH3 N
3 3
HN C
O O
OCH3 O CH
N N 3
Pyridyl ring
CH3 CH
HC 3
3
O O
183
Mode of action
A-2058 V A-2058 V
A-752 II A-752 II
184
Ketolides
C11- C12 carbamate substituted side chain (1)
Pharmacokinetics in mice
Concentrations (mg/l) at
HMR 3004 1.70 0.25 1.70 0.90 1.00 0.20 0.10 0.06
* sampling time (hours) Craig, 1996
185
Ketolides
C11- C12 carbamate substituted side chain (2)
Pharmacokinetics in mice
186
Ketolides
R
N Comparative human
C11 -C12 carbamate O
11
pharmacokinetics after
12
residue O a single oral dose 600 mg
N
N
N
187
Telithromycin Metabolites (1)
CH2 OH
N
N C
O
N
CH3 N COOH RU 78849 (N-propyl carboxylic)
O C OCH3
N C
N
H3C CH3 N
N
O O N O-
OH
O
C
RU 76584 (N-pyridine oxide)
CH3 N
H3C N O
H3C
O
CH3
Telithromycin H3C N
189
Structure activity
relationships
O N
HC CH N
3 3
9
C
O 11
O CH
• Mode of action N
3
• Enhanced in vitro activity
12 C H3
• Reduced efflux H3C • Intracellular accumulation
O H3C • Pharmacokinetics
O
• Tolerance
CH3
3
O
O O
OH
CH3
O
CH
• High stability in acidic pH 3
H3C N
• Overcoming MLSB
• Non inducer of MLSB resistance CH3
190
Macrolide resistance 14-membered ring
macrolide
Phosphorylation HO P OH E. coli
Nocardia spp
O
CH2 OH
Glycosylation
HO
O
Streptomyces antibioticus
1''' Streptomyces Vendargensis
CH3
HO O Nocardia spp
OH
O 2' N(CH 3)2 HO
CH3
6 O
O CH3
191
Macrolide resistance Ring hydrolysis
by esterases
HO
11
H3C
12
13
HO
O
1
CH3
H3C
Hydrolysis esterases O
Erythromycin A
192
Macrolide resistance
Erythromycin A
binding site
Transfert of methyl group in adenosyl methionine
H3C CH3
NH2 S-adenosyl-L-methionine N
N
N
N
N Erythromycin
O O
N N N N No binding
P O CH2 P O CH
H2
O O
HO Ribosome HO
methylase Erne
O OH O OH
CH
3
O R2 R1
8
OH
H3C
CH3 OH
O R2 OH OH O O O
HO 9 6
5 15
H3C C O
14 13 12 11 10 9 7 5 3 2
4 1
CH 3
HO 3 H3C OH HO CH3
CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3
2
O R1 Esterase
O
1
CH3
H3C
R1 : α-L cladinose
R2 : D-desosamine
194