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Decoding the Structural Basis For Carbapenem Hydrolysis By Class A β-lactamases: Fishing For A Pharmacophore

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Nowadays clinical therapy witnesses a challenging bacterial resistance limiting the available armament of antibiotics. Over the decades strains resistant to all antibiotics have been selected while medicinal chemists were not able to develop agents capable of destroying them or to prevent their extension. In particular, carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE), representing one of the most common human pathogens, have been reported with increased frequency since their first identification twenty years ago. The enterobacterial carbapenemases differ from the extended spectrum β-lactamases (ESBL) in their ability to hydrolyze β-lactams, cephalosporins and most importantly monobactams and carbapenems. They are progressively spreading throughout the world, therefore leaving no effective β-lactam to cure bacterial infections. Several BLs-carbapenemase Xray structures have been determined making these enzymes attractive targets for structure-based drug design studies. However, very little has been done so far to powerfully address the inhibitor design issues for this emerging type of BLs. Here, we focus on the structural basis for molecular recognition and for broad spectrum activity of class A carbapenemases: based on available 3-dimensional structural information we identify a theoretical pharmacophoric model as a starting point for the development of needed carbapenemases inhibitors.

Keywords: Carbapenemases; guyana extended-spectrum-lactamase (GES); klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenemase (KPC); molecular interaction fields (MIFs); nonmetallo carbapanemase (NMC); pharmacophore prediction; serratia fonticola (SFC1); serratia marcescens (SME)

Document Type: Research Article

Publication date: 01 July 2016

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  • Current Drug Targets aims to cover the latest and most outstanding developments on the medicinal chemistry and pharmacology of molecular drug targets e.g. disease specific proteins, receptors, enzymes, genes. Each issue of the journal will be devoted to a single timely topic, with series of in-depth reviews, written by leaders in the field, covering a range of current topics on drug targets. These issues will be organized and led by a guest editor who is a recognized expert in the overall topic. As the discovery, identification, characterisation and validation of novel human drug targets for drug discovery continues to grow; this journal will be essential reading for all pharmaceutical scientists involved in drug discovery and development.
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