Abstract

Enoyl-ACP reductase (FabI) is a key enzyme of the type II fatty acid biosynthesis (FAS-II) pathway and a validated antimicrobial target. In the current study, three linear sesquiterpene lactones obtained from Anthemis auriculata, namely anthecotulide (1), 4-hydroxyanthecotulide (2) and 4-acetoxyanthecotulide (3) were evaluated for specific inhibitory effects against the FabI enzyme from three pathogenic microorganisms, Plasmodium falciparum (PfFabI), Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MtFabI) and Escherichia coli (EcFabI). In addition, the compounds were also tested against two elongation enzymes from the plasmodial FAS-II system, beta-ketoacyl-ACP reductase (PfFabG) and beta-hydroxyacyl-ACP deydratase (PfFabZ). The compounds showed clear differentiation in inhibition of FabI enzymes from different microorganisms. Anthecotulide (1) was most active against MtFabI (IC(50) 4.5 microg/ml), whereas the oxygenated derivatives thereof (compounds 2 and 3) specifically inhibited plasmodial FAS-II enzymes, PfFabI and PfFabG (IC(50) values 20-75 microg/ml). All compounds were inactive towards EcFabI. In whole cell assays, all three compounds exhibited antimalarial and antibacterial activities.

Full Text
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