Abstract:
Decline in the antibacterial drug discovery along with the emergence of multiple drug
resistance in Gram negative bacterial pathogens poses a serious threat to the human health. Over a
period of last 50 years, only a few antibacterial drugs have been introduced to the market and most
of the clinically useful old antibiotics have become ineffective against many bacterial pathogens.
Many of the infectious diseases, in particularly nosocomial (hospital acquired) infections caused
by the Gram negative bacteria are almost incurable. Acinetobacter baumannii,the leading cause of
hospital acquired infection worldwide is an example of such a grave situation. Various mutants of
the organism are resistant to almost all the antibiotics available in the market. Discovery of novel
antibacterial molecules with new therapeutic targets and reviving the efficacy of old antibiotics are
the only solution of the problem. This study is an endeavor to that direction by employing a small
molecule library. Phenotype based whole cell screening was adopted for screening a small
molecule library of 10956 molecules against Gram negative bacteria. Screening led to the
identification of IITR06144, a small molecule which is effective against a broad range of bacterial
pathogens. The mode of action of the molecule was investigated by using molecular genetic
techniques. The broad spectrum molecule was found to interfere with bacterial cell division. It
restricts two daughter cells to separate from each other during cell division by inhibiting FtsZ, a
major protein involved in septum formation during cytokinesis. In another approach, 8000
molecules were screened to discover a novel efflux pump inhibitor (EPI) of AbeM, a proton driven
multidrug transporter in A. baumannii. Fluoroquinolones are the major substrates of AbeM and
expression of this efflux pump confer fluoroquinolone resistance in A.baumannii. The objective of
the study was to identify a molecule which can potentiate the efficiency of fluoroquinolones
against the drug resistant A.baumannii. Elevated resistance of E.coli KAM32 (devoid of major
efflux pumps) harboring multiple copies of abeM in a multicopy plasmid has been exploited for
the screening. IITR08027, a small molecule (not inhibitory by its own) has been identified which
causes a significant fold (16-32 fold) of reduction in Minimum Inhibitory Concentrations (MICs)
of both ciprofloxacin and norfloxacin against clinical isolate of A.baumannii express AbeM or its
homologues. The small molecule has been characterized and established as an efflux pump
II
inhibitor. The advantage of using the molecule in combination with ciprofloxacin against
fluoroquinolone resistant A.baumannii was evaluated by chemical genetic studies.