Department of Biochemistry, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee 37232, United States.
Department of Medicine (Hematology/Oncology), Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee 37232, United States.
ACS Infect Dis. 2024 Apr 12;10(4):1097-1115. doi: 10.1021/acsinfecdis.4c00128. Epub 2024 Apr 2.
Beyond their requisite functions in many critical DNA processes, the bacterial type II topoisomerases, gyrase and topoisomerase IV, are the targets of fluoroquinolone antibacterials. These drugs act by stabilizing gyrase/topoisomerase IV-generated DNA strand breaks and by robbing the cell of the catalytic activities of these essential enzymes. Since their clinical approval in the mid-1980s, fluoroquinolones have been used to treat a broad spectrum of infectious diseases and are listed among the five "highest priority" critically important antimicrobial classes by the World Health Organization. Unfortunately, the widespread use of fluoroquinolones has been accompanied by a rise in target-mediated resistance caused by specific mutations in gyrase and topoisomerase IV, which has curtailed the medical efficacy of this drug class. As a result, efforts are underway to identify novel antibacterials that target the bacterial type II topoisomerases. Several new classes of gyrase/topoisomerase IV-targeted antibacterials have emerged, including novel bacterial topoisomerase inhibitors, gyrase inhibitors, triazaacenaphthylenes, spiropyrimidinetriones, and thiophenes. Phase III clinical trials that utilized two members of these classes, gepotidacin (triazaacenaphthylene) and zoliflodacin (spiropyrimidinetrione), have been completed with positive outcomes, underscoring the potential of these compounds to become the first new classes of antibacterials introduced into the clinic in decades. Because gyrase and topoisomerase IV are validated targets for established and emerging antibacterials, this review will describe the catalytic mechanism and cellular activities of the bacterial type II topoisomerases, their interactions with fluoroquinolones, the mechanism of target-mediated fluoroquinolone resistance, and the actions of novel antibacterials against wild-type and fluoroquinolone-resistant gyrase and topoisomerase IV.
除了在许多关键的 DNA 过程中发挥必要的功能外,细菌 II 型拓扑异构酶——回旋酶和拓扑异构酶 IV 也是氟喹诺酮类抗菌药物的作用靶点。这些药物通过稳定回旋酶/拓扑异构酶 IV 产生的 DNA 链断裂,并剥夺细胞这些必需酶的催化活性来发挥作用。自 20 世纪 80 年代中期临床批准以来,氟喹诺酮类药物已被用于治疗广泛的传染病,并被世界卫生组织列为五类“最高优先级”至关重要的抗菌药物类别之一。不幸的是,氟喹诺酮类药物的广泛使用伴随着由回旋酶和拓扑异构酶 IV 中的特定突变引起的靶介导耐药性的增加,这限制了该类药物的医学疗效。因此,正在努力寻找针对细菌 II 型拓扑异构酶的新型抗菌药物。已经出现了几类新的靶向细菌 II 型拓扑异构酶的抗菌药物,包括新型细菌拓扑异构酶抑制剂、回旋酶抑制剂、三氮杂吖辛、螺吡喃并嘧啶酮和噻吩。利用这些类别中的两个成员—— gepotidacin(三氮杂吖辛)和 zoliflodacin(螺吡喃并嘧啶酮)完成的 III 期临床试验取得了积极的结果,这突显了这些化合物成为几十年来首次引入临床的新型抗菌药物的潜力。由于回旋酶和拓扑异构酶 IV 是已确立和新兴抗菌药物的有效靶点,因此本综述将描述细菌 II 型拓扑异构酶的催化机制和细胞活性、它们与氟喹诺酮类药物的相互作用、靶介导氟喹诺酮耐药的机制以及新型抗菌药物对野生型和氟喹诺酮耐药回旋酶和拓扑异构酶 IV 的作用。