Pathogenic bacteria have devastating impacts on human health as a result of acquired antibiotic resistance and innate tolerance. Every class of our current antibiotic arsenal was initially discovered as growth-inhibiting… Click to show full abstract
Pathogenic bacteria have devastating impacts on human health as a result of acquired antibiotic resistance and innate tolerance. Every class of our current antibiotic arsenal was initially discovered as growth-inhibiting agents that target actively replicating (individual, free-floating) planktonic bacteria. Bacteria are notorious for utilizing a diversity of resistance mechanisms to overcome the action of conventional antibiotic therapies and forming surface-attached biofilm communities enriched in (non-replicating) persister cells. To address problems associated with pathogenic bacteria, our group is developing halogenated phenazine (HP) molecules that demonstrate potent antibacterial and biofilm-eradicating activities through a unique iron starvation mode of action. In this study, we designed, synthesized, and investigated a focused collection of carbonate-linked HP prodrugs bearing a quinone trigger to target the reductive cytoplasm of bacteria for bioactivation and subsequent HP release. The quinone moiety also contains a polyethylene glycol group, which dramatically enhances the water-solubility properties of the HP-quinone prodrugs reported herein. We found carbonate-linked HP-quinone prodrugs 11, 21-23 to demonstrate good linker stability, rapid release of the active HP warhead following dithiothreitol (reductive) treatment, and potent antibacterial activities against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus epidermidis, and Enterococcus faecalis. In addition, HP-quinone prodrug 21 induced rapid iron starvation in MRSA and S. epidermidis biofilms, illustrating prodrug action within these surface-attached communities. Overall, we are highly encouraged by these findings and believe that HP prodrugs have the potential to address antibiotic resistant and tolerant bacterial infections.
               
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