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Dive into the research topics where David F. Bruhn is active.

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Featured researches published by David F. Bruhn.


Nature Medicine | 2014

Spectinamides: a new class of semisynthetic antituberculosis agents that overcome native drug efflux

Richard E. Lee; Julian Gregston Hurdle; Jiuyu Liu; David F. Bruhn; Tanja Matt; Michael S. Scherman; Pavan K. Vaddady; Zhong Zheng; Jianjun Qi; Rashid Akbergenov; Sourav Das; Dora B. Madhura; Chetan Rathi; Ashit Trivedi; Cristina Villellas; Robin B. Lee; Samanthi L. Waidyarachchi; Dianqing Sun; Michael R. McNeil; José A. Aínsa; Helena I. Boshoff; Mercedes Gonzalez-Juarrero; Bernd Meibohm; Erik C. Böttger; Anne J. Lenaerts

Although the classical antibiotic spectinomycin is a potent bacterial protein synthesis inhibitor, poor antimycobacterial activity limits its clinical application for treating tuberculosis. Using structure-based design, we generated a new semisynthetic series of spectinomycin analogs with selective ribosomal inhibition and excellent narrow-spectrum antitubercular activity. In multiple murine infection models, these spectinamides were well tolerated, significantly reduced lung mycobacterial burden and increased survival. In vitro studies demonstrated a lack of cross resistance with existing tuberculosis therapeutics, activity against multidrug-resistant (MDR) and extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis and an excellent pharmacological profile. Key to their potent antitubercular properties was their structural modification to evade the Rv1258c efflux pump, which is upregulated in MDR strains and is implicated in macrophage-induced drug tolerance. The antitubercular efficacy of spectinamides demonstrates that synthetic modifications to classical antibiotics can overcome the challenge of intrinsic efflux pump-mediated resistance and expands opportunities for target-based tuberculosis drug discovery.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Design, synthesis and anti-tuberculosis activity of 1-adamantyl-3-heteroaryl ureas with improved in vitro pharmacokinetic properties.

E. Jeffrey North; Michael S. Scherman; David F. Bruhn; Jerrod S. Scarborough; Marcus M. Maddox; Victoria Jones; Anna E. Grzegorzewicz; Lei Yang; Tamara Hess; Christophe Morisseau; Mary Jackson; Michael R. McNeil; Richard E. Lee

Out of the prominent global ailments, tuberculosis (TB) is still one of the leading causes of death worldwide due to infectious disease. Development of new drugs that shorten the current tuberculosis treatment time and have activity against drug resistant strains is of utmost importance. Towards these goals we have focused our efforts on developing novel anti-TB compounds with the general structure of 1-adamantyl-3-phenyl urea. This series is active against Mycobacteria and previous lead compounds were found to inhibit the membrane transporter MmpL3, the protein responsible for mycolic acid transport across the plasma membrane. However, these compounds suffered from poor in vitro pharmacokinetic (PK) profiles and they have a similar structure/SAR to inhibitors of human soluble epoxide hydrolase (sEH) enzymes. Therefore, in this study the further optimization of this compound class was driven by three factors: (1) to increase selectivity for anti-TB activity over human sEH activity, (2) to optimize PK profiles including solubility and (3) to maintain target inhibition. A new series of 1-adamantyl-3-heteroaryl ureas was designed and synthesized replacing the phenyl substituent of the original series with pyridines, pyrimidines, triazines, oxazoles, isoxazoles, oxadiazoles and pyrazoles. This study produced lead isoxazole, oxadiazole and pyrazole substituted adamantyl ureas with improved in vitro PK profiles, increased selectivity and good anti-TB potencies with sub μg/mL minimum inhibitory concentrations.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Synthesis, Structure–Activity Relationship Studies, and Antibacterial Evaluation of 4-Chromanones and Chalcones, as Well as Olympicin A and Derivatives

Li Feng; Marcus M. Maddox; Md. Zahidul Alam; Lissa S. Tsutsumi; Gagandeep Narula; David F. Bruhn; Xiaoqian Wu; Shayna Sandhaus; Robin B. Lee; Charles J. Simmons; Yuk-Ching Tse-Dinh; Julian G. Hurdle; Richard E. Lee; Dianqing Sun

On the basis of recently reported abyssinone II and olympicin A, a series of chemically modified flavonoid phytochemicals were synthesized and evaluated against Mycobacterium tuberculosis and a panel of Gram-positive and -negative bacterial pathogens. Some of the synthesized compounds exhibited good antibacterial activities against Gram-positive pathogens including methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus with minimum inhibitory concentration as low as 0.39 μg/mL. SAR analysis revealed that the 2-hydrophobic substituent and the 4-hydrogen bond donor/acceptor of the 4-chromanone scaffold together with the hydroxy groups at 5- and 7-positions enhanced antibacterial activities; the 2′,4′-dihydroxylated A ring and the lipophilic substituted B ring of chalcone derivatives were pharmacophoric elements for antibacterial activities. Mode of action studies performed on selected compounds revealed that they dissipated the bacterial membrane potential, resulting in the inhibition of macromolecular biosynthesis; further studies showed that selected compounds inhibited DNA topoisomerase IV, suggesting complex mechanisms of actions for compounds in this series.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Antitubercular nitrofuran isoxazolines with improved pharmacokinetic properties.

Rakesh; David F. Bruhn; Dora B. Madhura; Marcus M. Maddox; Robin B. Lee; Ashit Trivedi; Lei Yang; Michael S. Scherman; Janet C. Gilliland; Veronica Gruppo; Michael R. McNeil; Anne J. Lenaerts; Bernd Meibohm; Richard E. Lee

A series of tetracyclic nitrofuran isoxazoline anti-tuberculosis agents was designed and synthesized to improve the pharmacokinetic properties of an initial lead compound, which had potent anti-tuberculosis activity but suffered from poor solubility, high protein binding and rapid metabolism. In this study, structural modifications were carried on the outer phenyl and piperidine rings to introduce solubilizing and metabolically blocking functional groups. The compounds generated were evaluated for their in vitro antitubercular activity, bacterial spectrum of activity, solubility, permeability, microsomal stability and protein binding. Pharmacokinetic profiles for the most promising candidates were then determined. Compounds with phenyl morpholine and pyridyl morpholine outer rings were found to be the most potent anti-tuberculosis agents in the series. These compounds retained a narrow antibacterial spectrum of activity, with weak anti-Gram positive and no Gram negative activity, as well as good activity against non-replicating Mycobacterium tuberculosis in a low oxygen model. Overall, the addition of solubilizing and metabolically blocked outer rings did improve solubility and decrease protein binding as designed. However, the metabolic stability for compounds in this series was generally lower than desired. The best three compounds selected for in vivo pharmacokinetic testing all showed high oral bioavailability, with one notable compound showing a significantly longer half-life and good tolerability supporting its further advancement.


Scientific Reports | 2015

In vitro and in vivo Evaluation of Synergism between Anti-Tubercular Spectinamides and Non-Classical Tuberculosis Antibiotics

David F. Bruhn; Michael S. Scherman; Jiuyu Liu; Dimitri Scherbakov; Bernd Meibohm; Erik C. Böttger; Anne J. Lenaerts; Richard E. Lee

Spectinamides are new semi-synthetic spectinomycin derivatives with potent anti-tubercular activity. The reported synergism of the precursor spectinomycin with other antibiotics prompted us to examine whether spectinamides sensitize M. tuberculosis to other antibiotics not traditionally used in the treatment of tuberculosis to potentially expand therapeutic options for MDR/XDR Tuberculosis. Whole cell synergy checkerboard screens were performed using the laboratory strain M. tuberculosis H37Rv, lead spectinamide 1599, and a broad panel of 27 antibiotics. In vitro, 1599 synergized with 11 drugs from 6 antibiotic classes. The observed synergy was tested against clinical isolates confirming synergy with Clarithromycin, Doxycycline and Clindamycin, combinations of which were taken forward for in vivo efficacy determination. Co-administration of 1599 and clarithromycin provided additional bacterial killing in a mouse model of acute tuberculosis infection, but not in a chronic infection model. Further studies indicated that mismatched drug exposure profiles likely permitted induction of phenotypic clarithromycin resistance and subsequent loss of synergism. These studies highlight the importance of validating in vitro synergism and the challenge of matching drug exposures to obtain a synergistic outcome in vivo. Results from this study indicate that a 1599 clarithromycin combination is potentially viable, providing the drug exposures can be carefully monitored.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Pentacyclic nitrofurans with in vivo efficacy and activity against nonreplicating Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Rakesh; David F. Bruhn; Michael S. Scherman; Lisa K. Woolhiser; Dora B. Madhura; Marcus M. Maddox; Aman P. Singh; Robin B. Lee; Julian G. Hurdle; Michael R. McNeil; Anne J. Lenaerts; Bernd Meibohm; Richard E. Lee

The reductively activated nitroaromatic class of antimicrobials, which include nitroimidazole and the more metabolically labile nitrofuran antitubercular agents, have demonstrated some potential for development as therapeutics against dormant TB bacilli. In previous studies, the pharmacokinetic properties of nitrofuranyl isoxazolines were improved by incorporation of the outer ring elements of the antitubercular nitroimidazole OPC-67683. This successfully increased stability of the resulting pentacyclic nitrofuran lead compound Lee1106 (referred to herein as 9a). In the current study, we report the synthesis and antimicrobial properties of 9a and panel of 9a analogs, which were developed to increase oral bioavailability. These hybrid nitrofurans remained potent inhibitors of Mycobacterium tuberculosis with favorable selectivity indices (>150) and a narrow spectrum of activity. In vivo, the pentacyclic nitrofuran compounds showed long half-lives and high volumes of distribution. Based on pharmacokinetic testing and lack of toxicity in vivo, 9a remained the series lead. 9a exerted a lengthy post antibiotic effect and was highly active against nonreplicating M. tuberculosis grown under hypoxia. 9a showed a low potential for cross resistance to current antitubercular agents, and a mechanism of activation distinct from pre-clinical tuberculosis candidates PA-824 and OPC-67683. Together these studies show that 9a is a nanomolar inhibitor of actively growing as well as nonreplicating M. tuberculosis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016

Activation of Exogenous Fatty Acids to Acyl-Acyl Carrier Protein Cannot Bypass FabI Inhibition in Neisseria.

Jiangwei Yao; David F. Bruhn; Matthew W. Frank; Richard E. Lee; Charles O. Rock

Neisseria is a Gram-negative pathogen with phospholipids composed of straight chain saturated and monounsaturated fatty acids, the ability to incorporate exogenous fatty acids, and lipopolysaccharides that are not essential. The FabI inhibitor, AFN-1252, was deployed as a chemical biology tool to determine whether Neisseria can bypass the inhibition of fatty acid synthesis by incorporating exogenous fatty acids. Neisseria encodes a functional FabI that was potently inhibited by AFN-1252. AFN-1252 caused a dose-dependent inhibition of fatty acid synthesis in growing Neisseria, a delayed inhibition of growth phenotype, and minimal inhibition of DNA, RNA, and protein synthesis, showing that its mode of action is through inhibiting fatty acid synthesis. Isotopic fatty acid labeling experiments showed that Neisseria encodes the ability to incorporate exogenous fatty acids into its phospholipids by an acyl-acyl carrier protein-dependent pathway. However, AFN-1252 remained an effective antibacterial when Neisseria were supplemented with exogenous fatty acids. These results demonstrate that extracellular fatty acids are activated by an acyl-acyl carrier protein synthetase (AasN) and validate type II fatty acid synthesis (FabI) as a therapeutic target against Neisseria.


The Journal of Antibiotics | 2013

Syntheses and evaluation of macrocyclic engelhardione analogs as antitubercular and antibacterial agents

Li Shen; Marcus M. Maddox; Sudip Adhikari; David F. Bruhn; Manish Kumar; Robin E. B. Lee; Julian G. Hurdle; Richard E. Lee; Dianqing Sun

The natural product engelhardione is an underexplored chemotype for developing novel treatments for bacterial infections; we therefore explored this natural product scaffold for chemical diversification and structure–activity relationship studies. Macrocyclic engelhardione and structural regioisomers were synthesized using a series of aldol condensations and selective hydrogenations to generate the 1,7-diarylheptan-3-one derivatives, followed by microwave-assisted intramolecular Ullmann coupling to afford a series of macrocyclic diaryl ether analogs. An extended macrocyclic chemical library was then produced by oxime formation, reductive amination and O-alkylation. Antibacterial evaluation revealed that the reductive amination derivatives 7b and 7d showed moderate activities (minimum inhibitory concentrations: 12.5–25 μg ml−1) against Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Gram-positive pathogens, as well as anti-Gram-negative activity against an efflux impaired Escherichia coli strain. These results provide validated leads for further optimization and development.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2016

Synthesis and evaluation of pretomanid (PA-824) oxazolidinone hybrids

Rakesh; David F. Bruhn; Michael S. Scherman; Aman P. Singh; Lei Yang; Jiuyu Liu; Anne J. Lenaerts; Richard E. Lee

Pretomanid (PA-824) is an important nitroimidazole antitubercular agent in late stage clinical trials. However, pretomanid is limited by poor solubility and high protein binding, which presents opportunities for improvement in its physiochemical properties. Conversely, the oxazolidinone linezolid has excellent physicochemical properties and has recently shown impressive activity for the treatment of drug resistant tuberculosis. In this study we explore if incorporation of the outer ring elements found in first and second generation oxazolidinones into the nitroimidazole core of pretomanid can be used to improve its physicochemical and antitubercular properties. The synthesis of pretomanid outer oxazolidinone ring hybrids was successfully performed producing hybrids that maintained antitubercular activity and had improved in vitro physicochemical properties. Three lead compounds were identified and evaluated in a chronic model of tuberculosis infection in mice. However, the compounds lacked efficacy suggesting that portions of PA-824 tail not found in the hybrid molecules are required for in vivo efficacy.


Science Translational Medicine | 2015

Aminomethyl spectinomycins as therapeutics for drug-resistant respiratory tract and sexually transmitted bacterial infections.

David F. Bruhn; Samanthi L. Waidyarachchi; Dora B. Madhura; Dimitri Shcherbakov; Zhong Zheng; Jiuyu Liu; Yasser M. Abdelrahman; Aman P. Singh; Stefan Duscha; Chetan Rathi; Robin B. Lee; Robert J. Belland; Bernd Meibohm; Jason W. Rosch; Erik C. Böttger; Richard E. Lee

A new series of spectinomycin analogs with potency against drug-resistant bacterial pathogens was designed and developed with a structure-based approach and validated in vitro and in vivo. Teaching an old antibiotic new tricks More and more cases of gonorrhea no longer respond to standard antibiotic treatment, leading the CDC (U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) to classify Neisseria gonorrhoeae as an urgent threat. New antibiotics are urgently needed to treat this and other emerging drug-resistant pathogens. To this end, Bruhn and Waidyarachchi et al. have taken a second look at an old group of antibiotics, the spectinomycins, a class of drugs that inhibit bacterial protein synthesis but do not kill many types of pathogens. By carefully mapping how the drug binds to the ribosome structure, the authors determined that N-benzyl–substituted spectinomycins should be able to inhibit the ribosomes of a broad spectrum of bacteria that produce disease. And indeed, this new series potently inhibited bacteria that cause respiratory illness (Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, Legionella pneumophila, and Moraxella catarrhalis) and sexually transmitted disease (N. gonorrhoeae and Chlamydia trachomatis). Their pharmacokinetics properties were promising, and assays showed that they are unlikely to cause adverse reactions. These new spectinomycins are active against drug-resistant forms of S. pneumoniae and cure mice of fatal pneumococcal pneumonia and sepsis, an encouraging result for the eventual use of these drugs for human infection. The antibiotic spectinomycin is a potent inhibitor of bacterial protein synthesis with a unique mechanism of action and an excellent safety index, but it lacks antibacterial activity against most clinically important pathogens. A series of N-benzyl–substituted 3′-(R)-3′-aminomethyl-3′-hydroxy spectinomycins was developed on the basis of a computational analysis of the aminomethyl spectinomycin binding site and structure-guided synthesis. These compounds had ribosomal inhibition values comparable to spectinomycin but showed increased potency against the common respiratory tract pathogens Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, Legionella pneumophila, and Moraxella catarrhalis, as well as the sexually transmitted bacteria Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Chlamydia trachomatis. Non–ribosome-binding 3′-(S) isomers of the lead compounds demonstrated weak inhibitory activity in in vitro protein translation assays and poor antibacterial activity, indicating that the antibacterial activity of the series remains on target against the ribosome. Compounds also demonstrated no mammalian cytotoxicity, improved microsomal stability, and favorable pharmacokinetic properties in rats. The lead compound from the series exhibited excellent chemical stability superior to spectinomycin; no interaction with a panel of human receptors and drug metabolism enzymes, suggesting low potential for adverse reactions or drug-drug interactions in vivo; activity in vitro against a panel of penicillin-, macrolide-, and cephalosporin-resistant S. pneumoniae clinical isolates; and the ability to cure mice of fatal pneumococcal pneumonia and sepsis at a dose of 5 mg/kg. Together, these studies indicate that N-benzyl aminomethyl spectinomycins are suitable for further development to treat drug-resistant respiratory tract and sexually transmitted bacterial infections.

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Richard E. Lee

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Jiuyu Liu

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Robin B. Lee

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Bernd Meibohm

University of Tennessee Health Science Center

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Marcus M. Maddox

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Aman P. Singh

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Dianqing Sun

University of Tennessee Health Science Center

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