Reference-based chemical-genetic interaction profiling to elucidate small molecule mechanism of action in Mycobacterium tuberculosis

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Abstract

In an era of increasing resistance, new and effective strategies are needed for antibiotic discovery. Whole-cell active screens yield candidate compounds lacking mechanism-of-action (MOA) information and thus do not provide biological insight for prioritization. We previously reported PROSPECT ( PR imary screening O f S trains to P rioritize E xpanded C hemistry and T argets), an antimicrobial discovery strategy that measures chemical-genetic interactions between small molecules and a pool of Mycobacterium tuberculosis mutants, each depleted of a different essential protein target. PROSPECT facilitates efficient hit prioritization by simultaneously identifying whole-cell active compounds with high sensitivity and providing early insights into their MOA. Here, we report a reference-based approach to infer MOA from often complex PROSPECT data. For this aim, we curated a reference set of 437 compounds with published, annotated MOA and known or suspected antitubercular activity, and applied PROSPECT to it. We then developed P erturbagen CL ass (PCL) analysis, a computational method that predicts MOA by comparing chemical-genetic interaction profiles of unknown compounds to those of this reference set. In leave-one-out cross-validation, PCL analysis correctly predicted MOA with 70% sensitivity and 75% precision. When applied to 75 antitubercular leads with known MOA previously reported by GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), PCL analysis similarly achieved 69% sensitivity and 87% precision. We also analyzed 98 GSK compounds lacking MOA information, predicting 60 of them to act via a reference MOA, and followed up with functional validation of 29 compounds predicted to target respiration-related MOAs. Finally, we applied PROSPECT and PCL analysis to ∼5,000 compounds from larger unbiased libraries that had not been preselected for antitubercular activity. PCL analysis identified a novel scaffold lacking wild-type activity but predicted to inhibit respiration via QcrB, and we confirmed this prediction while chemically optimizing this scaffold to achieve wild-type activity. PCL analysis of PROSPECT data thus enables rapid MOA assignment and hit prioritization, advancing the discovery of new, potent antitubercular compounds.

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