Herein, a copper-catalyzed highly diastereoselective aerobic oxygenated [3+3] cyclization of 3-substituted indoles with C,N-cyclic azomethine imines using oxygen as the sole oxidant under mild conditions has been developed. This protocol provides a simple and convenient approach for constructing [2,3]-fused indoline O-heterocycles bearing two pharmaceutically intriguing parts, tetrahydroisoquinoline and indoline. Good yields and excellent diastereoselectivity under mild reaction conditions were observed.
Methionyl-tRNA synthetase (MetRS) charges tRNAMet with l-methionine (L-Met) to decode the ATG codon for protein translation, making it indispensable for all cellular lives. Many gram-positive bacteria use a type 1 MetRS (MetRS1), which is considered a promising antimicrobial drug target due to its low sequence identity with human cytosolic MetRS (HcMetRS, which belongs to MetRS2). Here, we report crystal structures of a representative MetRS1 from Staphylococcus aureus (SaMetRS) in its apo and substrate-binding forms. The connecting peptide (CP) domain of SaMetRS differs from HcMetRS in structural organization and dynamic movement. We screened 1049 chemical fragments against SaMetRS preincubated with or without substrate ATP, and ten hits were identified. Four cocrystal structures revealed that the fragments bound to either the L-Met binding site or an auxiliary pocket near the tRNA CCA end binding site of SaMetRS. Interestingly, fragment binding was enhanced by ATP in most cases, suggesting a potential ATP-assisted ligand binding mechanism in MetRS1. Moreover, co-binding with ATP was also observed in our cocrystal structure of SaMetRS with a class of newly reported inhibitors that simultaneously occupied the auxiliary pocket, tRNA site and L-Met site. Our findings will inspire the development of new MetRS1 inhibitors for fighting microbial infections.
Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (aaRSs) are promising drug targets due to their essential roles in protein translation. Although current inhibitors primarily occupy one or two of the three substrate binding sites on aaRSs, we report here the structure-based design of the first class of triple-site aaRS inhibitors by targeting Salmonella enterica threonyl-tRNA synthetase (SeThrRS). Competition of our compounds with all three substrates on SeThrRS binding was confirmed via isothermal titration calorimetry assays. Cocrystal structures of three compounds bound to SeThrRS unambiguously confirmed their substrate-mimicking triple-site binding mode. Compound 36j exhibited the best enzyme activity against SeThrRS with IC 50 = 19 nM and K d = 35.4 nM. Compounds 36b, 36k, and 36l exhibited antibacterial activities with minimum inhibitory concentration values of 2−8 μg/mL against the tested bacteria, which are superior to those of the reported dual-site ThrRS inhibitors. Our study provides the first proof-of-concept for developing triple-site inhibitors against aaRSs, inspiring future aaRS-based drug discoveries.
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