AI Article Synopsis

  • The combination of classical beta-lactamase inhibitors (clavulanic acid, tazobactam, and sulbactam) with beta-lactam antibiotics is effective against class A beta-lactamases but not against other classes, necessitating new inhibitors.
  • Various novel molecules, including derivatives of beta-lactam rings and non-beta-lactam compounds like NXL-104, show potential for targeting serine active enzymes, while effective inhibitors for metallo-beta-lactamases are still needed.
  • The search for broad-spectrum inhibitors focuses on compounds with chelating groups combined with aromatic structures, and this review outlines tested molecules and the current progress in the field of beta-lactamase inhibitor

Article Abstract

The use of the three classical beta-lactamase inhibitors (clavulanic acid, tazobactam and sulbactam) in combination with beta-lactam antibacterials is currently the most successful strategy to combat beta-lactamase-mediated resistance. However, these inhibitors are efficient in inactivating only class A beta-lactamases and the efficiency of the inhibitor/antibacterial combination can be compromised by several mechanisms, such as the production of naturally resistant class B or class D enzymes, the hyperproduction of AmpC or even the production of evolved inhibitor-resistant class A enzymes. Thus, there is an urgent need for the development of novel inhibitors. For serine active enzymes (classes A, C and D), derivatives of the beta-lactam ring such as 6-beta-halogenopenicillanates, beta-lactam sulfones, penems and oxapenems, monobactams or trinems seem to be potential starting points to design efficient molecules (such as AM-112 and LK-157). Moreover, a promising non-beta-lactam molecule, NXL-104, is now under clinical development. In contrast, an ideal inhibitor of metallo-beta-lactamases (class B) remains to be found, despite the huge number of potential molecules already described (biphenyl tetrazoles, cysteinyl peptides, mercaptocarboxylates, succinic acid derivatives, etc.). The search for such an inhibitor is complicated by the absence of a covalent intermediate in their catalytic mechanisms and the fact that beta-lactam derivatives often behave as substrates rather than as inhibitors. Currently, the most promising broad-spectrum inhibitors of class B enzymes are molecules presenting chelating groups (thiols, carboxylates, etc.) combined with an aromatic group. This review describes all the types of molecules already tested as potential beta-lactamase inhibitors and thus constitutes an update of the current status in beta-lactamase inhibitor discovery.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.2165/11318430-000000000-00000DOI Listing

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