Hospital-acquired infections are on the rise and represent both, a clinical and financial burden. With resistance emerging and an ever-dwindling armamentarium at hand, infections caused by Acinetobacter baumannii are particularly problematic, since these bacteria have a high level of resistance and resilience to traditional and even last-resort antibiotics. The antibiotic rifabutin was recently found to show potent in vitro and in vivo activity against extensively drug resistant A. baumannii. Building on this discovery, we report on the synthesis and activity of rifabutin analogs, with a focus on N-functionalization of the piperidine ring. The antimicrobial testing uncovered structure activity relationships (SAR) for A. baumannii that were not reflected in Staphylococcus aureus. The cellular activity did not correlate with cell-free transcription inhibition, but with bacterial intracellular compound accumulation. Mass spectrometry-based accumulation studies confirmed the involvement of the siderophore receptor FhuE in active compound translocation at low concentrations, and they showed a strong impact of the culture medium on the accumulation of rifabutin. Overall, the study underlines the structural feature required for strong accumulation of rifabutin in A. baumannii and identifies analogs as or more potent than rifabutin against A. baumannii.
Keywords: Ansamycin antibiotics; Carbapenem-resistant A. baumannii; Compound uptake; Minimum inhibitory concentration; Rifabutin; Structure-activity relationships.
Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.