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Improvement of Aglycone π-Stacking Yields Nano- to Subnanomolar FimH Antagonists.
ChemMedChem 2019 Februrary 2
Antimicrobial resistance has become a serious concern for the treatment of urinary tract infections. In this context, an anti-adhesive approach targeting FimH, a bacterial lectin enabling the attachment of E. coli to host cells, attracted considerable interest. FimH can adopt a low/medium-affinity state in the absence and a high-affinity state in the presence of shear forces. Until recently, mostly the high-affinity state has been investigated, despite the fact that a therapeutic antagonist should bind predominantly to the low-affinity state. In this communication, we demonstrate that fluorination of biphenyl α-d-mannosides leads to compounds with perfect π-π stacking interactions with the tyrosine gate of FimH, yielding low nanomolar to subnanomolar KDs for the low- and the high-affinity state, respectively. The face-to-face alignment of the perfluorinated biphenyl of FimH ligands and Tyr48 was confirmed by crystal structures as well as 1H,15N-HSQC NMR analysis. Finally, fluorination improves pharmacokinetic parameters predictive for oral availability.
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