Publications by authors named "Giang Le Thanh"

Article Synopsis
  • The rise of multi-drug-resistant bacteria has created a global healthcare crisis, highlighting the urgent need for new antibiotics with low resistance potential.
  • Moenomycin, a promising liposaccharide antibiotic that inhibits essential bacterial enzymes, faces challenges due to its poor absorption in the body due to high lipophilicity.
  • This study successfully synthesized new compounds based on pyranose scaffold chemistry inspired by moenomycin, which show similar antibacterial effectiveness but with better drug-like properties and lower toxicity in infection models.
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Success in discovering bioactive peptide mimetics is often limited by the difficulties in correctly transposing known binding elements of the active peptide onto a small and metabolically more stable scaffold while maintaining bioactivity. Here we describe a scanning approach using a library of pyranose-based peptidomimetics that is structurally diverse in a systematic manner, designed to cover all possible conformations of tripeptide motifs containing two aromatic groups and one positive charge. Structural diversity was achieved by efficient selection of various chemoforms, characterized by a choice of pyranose scaffold of defined chirality and substitution pattern.

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The pyranose scaffold is unique in its ability to position pharmacophore substituents in various ways in 3D space, and unique pharmacophore scanning libraries could be envisaged that focus on scanning topography rather than diversity in the type of substituents. Approaches have been described that make use of amine and acid functionalities on the pyranose scaffolds to append substituents, and this has enabled the generation of libraries of significant structural diversity. Our general aim was to generate libraries of pyranose-based drug-like mimetics, where the substituents are held close to the scaffold, in order to obtain molecules with better defined positions for the pharmacophore substituents.

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