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Multi-omics Investigation into the Mechanism of Action of an Anti-tubercular Fatty Acid Analogue. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates the mechanism of action of a new fatty acid analogue, 8-(2-cyclobuten-1-yl)octanoic acid (DA-CB), suggesting it disrupts the biosynthesis of mycolic acids in mycobacteria, which are crucial for their cell wall integrity.
  • - Results indicate that DA-CB likely inhibits a step after the action of a known mycolic acid inhibitor, ethionamide, affecting the production of keto-meromycolic acid and leading to changes in bacterial metabolism.
  • - The findings highlight DA-CB as a potential new treatment for tuberculosis, with its "clickable" feature allowing for tracking of the modified fatty acid within cells, aiding in

Article Abstract

The mechanism of action (MoA) of a clickable fatty acid analogue 8-(2-cyclobuten-1-yl)octanoic acid (DA-CB) has been investigated for the first time. Proteomics, metabolomics, and lipidomics were combined with a network analysis to investigate the MoA of DA-CB against (). The metabolomics results showed that DA-CB has a general MoA related to that of ethionamide (ETH), a mycolic acid inhibitor that targets enoyl-ACP reductase (InhA), but DA-CB likely inhibits a step downstream from InhA. Our combined multi-omics approach showed that DA-CB appears to disrupt the pathway leading to the biosynthesis of mycolic acids, an essential mycobacterial fatty acid for both and (). DA-CB decreased keto-meromycolic acid biosynthesis. This intermediate is essential in the formation of mature mycolic acid, which is a key component of the mycobacterial cell wall in a process that is catalyzed by the essential polyketide synthase Pks13 and the associated ligase FadD32. The multi-omics analysis revealed further collateral alterations in bacterial metabolism, including the overproduction of shorter carbon chain hydroxy fatty acids and branched chain fatty acids, alterations in pyrimidine metabolism, and a predominate downregulation of proteins involved in fatty acid biosynthesis. Overall, the results with DA-CB suggest the exploration of this and related compounds as a new class of tuberculosis (TB) therapeutics. Furthermore, the clickable nature of DA-CB may be leveraged to trace the cellular fate of the modified fatty acid or any derived metabolite or biosynthetic intermediate.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10948109PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.2c08238DOI Listing

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