The Calcium-Dependent Antibiotics: Structure-Activity Relationships and Determination of Their Lipid Target

ACS Infect Dis. 2024 Dec 23. doi: 10.1021/acsinfecdis.4c00810. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

The calcium-dependent antibiotics (CDAs) are a group of seven closely related membrane-active cyclic lipopeptide antibiotics (cLPAs) first isolated in the early 1980s from the fermentation broth of Streptomyces coelicolor. Their target was unknown, and the mechanism of action is uncertain. Herein, we report new routes for the synthesis of CDA4b and its analogues, explore the structure-activity relationships at its lipid tail and at positions 3, 9, and 11, and determine the CDAs' lipid target. A CDA4b analogue in which the epoxide group in CDA's 6-carbon lipid was replaced with a cyclopropyl group was 4-fold more active than CDA4b which suggests that the epoxide group is not acting as an electrophile to form a covalent bond with CDA4b's target. The activity of this cyclopropyl analogue was significantly increased by extending the length of the lipid to 10 carbons. Studies with analogues in which d-HOAsn9 is replaced with d-Asn9 or d-Ser9 reveal that the hydroxy group of the d-HOAsn9 residue is not crucial for CDAs' activity, while the amide moiety is important for activity. The l-Trp residue at position 11 could be replaced with l-kynurenine (l-Kyn) without significant loss of activity, while replacing the d-Trp residue at position 3 with d-Kyn resulted in a significant loss of activity. MIC values determined in the presence and absence of exogenous phospholipids and fluorescence spectroscopy studies using natural CDAs and CDA4b analogues containing Kyn and model membranes revealed that the CDAs' primary lipid target is cardiolipin, a target that is unique among the broader class of known calcium-dependent antibiotics.

Keywords: CDA; calcium-dependent antibiotics; cardiolipin; mechanism; structure−activity relationships.