Abstract
We previously reported potent ligands and inhibitors of Mycobacterium tuberculosis dethiobiotin synthetase (MtDTBS), a promising target for antituberculosis drug development (Schumann et al., ACS Chem Biol. 2021, 16, 2339-2347); here, the unconventional origin of the fragment compound they were derived from is described for the first time. Compound 1 (9b-hydroxy-6b,7,8,9,9a,9b-hexahydrocyclopenta[3,4]cyclobuta[1,2-c]chromen-6(6aH)-one), identified by an in silico fragment screen, was subsequently shown by surface plasmon resonance to have dose-responsive binding (KD = 0.6 mM). Clear electron density was revealed in the DAPA substrate binding pocket when 1 was soaked into MtDTBS crystals, but the density was inconsistent with the structure of 1. Here, we show that the lactone of 1 hydrolyzes to a carboxylic acid (2) under basic conditions, including those of the crystallography soak, with a subsequent ring opening of the component cyclobutane ring forming a cyclopentylacetic acid (3). Crystals soaked directly with authentic 3 produced an electron density that matched that of crystals soaked with presumed 1, confirming the identity of the bound ligand. The synthetic utility of fortuitously formed 3 enabled the subsequent compound development of nanomolar inhibitors. Our findings represent an example of chemical modification within drug discovery assays and demonstrate the value of high-resolution structural data in the fragment hit validation process.
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