UConn Researchers Kill MRSA with Tailored Chemistry

UConn medicinal chemists have developed experimental antibiotics that kill the often deadly bacteria MRSA.

MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus) bacteria. (SCIEPRO/Getty Images)

MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus) bacteria. (SCIEPRO/Getty Images)

UConn medicinal chemists have developed experimental antibiotics that kill MRSA, a common and often deadly bacteria that causes skin, lung, and heart infections. The success is due to their strategy, which found a weakness and exploited it in a way the bacteria should have trouble countering, the researchers report in the Dec. 22 issue of Cell Chemical Biology.

Cases of MRSA (Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus) are on the rise and increasingly resistant to common antibiotics. The first choice treatment for MRSA, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, is relatively safe and inexpensive. But trimethoprim-resistant MRSA has begun to spread around the globe. Up to 30 percent of infections in sub-Saharan African no longer respond to it, and significant numbers in Europe and Asia as well.

Dennis Wright, professor of pharmaceutical sciences, at his lab on April 1, 2016. (Peter Morenus/UConn Photo)
Dennis Wright, professor of pharmaceutical sciences, is leading a team of researchers who have developed a drug that will be harder for MRSA to evolve resistance against. (Peter Morenus/UConn Photo)

A team of medicinal chemists in the School of Pharmacy including Dennis Wright, the late Amy Anderson, and Ph.D. student Stephanie Reeve have been working to develop a drug that will be harder for MRSA to evolve resistance against. They had several candidates in the works when they asked colleagues at UConn Health and Hartford Hospital to start collecting trimethoprim-resistant strains of MRSA as test cases.

“Although resistance [to trimethoprim] in the community is generally less than 10 percent in our local area, resistance elsewhere is climbing,” says Michael Nailor, a UConn pharmacologist co-funded with Hartford Hospital. “Additionally, many vulnerable patient populations cannot take trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole or other generic drugs because of side effects they may cause, and new agents are needed.”

The local samples showed just how fast antibiotic resistance is spreading. Six of nine bacterial strains collected had genes for trimethoprim resistance that had never before been seen in the U.S. The strains were also variously resistant to other antibiotics, such as erythromycin and tetracycline.

But they didn’t stand a chance against the experimental antibiotics from Anderson, Wright, and Reeve’s lab.

“We’ve actually taken strains [of MRSA] from the clinic and shown that our compounds work,” says Reeve. “We were really happy about these results.”

Their strategy had worked.

“One of the most exciting aspect of this work was that we had worked hard to design broadly acting inhibitors against many different resistant forms of the enzymes, and these designs proved very effective against two new enzymes we had never considered or previously studied,” says Wright.

Folic acid (vitamin B9), molecular model. Atoms are represented as spheres and are colour-coded: carbon (grey), hydrogen (white), nitrogen (blue) and oxygen (red). (Laguna Design/Getty Images)
The molecular structure of folic acid (Vitamin B9). Atoms are represented as spheres and are colour-coded: carbon (grey), hydrogen (white), nitrogen (blue) and oxygen (red). (Laguna Design/Getty Images)

The strategic approach the chemists had taken was to target the bacteria’s use of Vitamin B9. Also known as folate, it’s as critical to MRSA bacteria as it is to us. Block its action, and a vital enzyme pathway is shut down. The bacteria die. Trimethoprim is currently the only antibacterial antifolate available, and bacteria have evolved different versions of the folate enzyme that aren’t impaired by it.

But Anderson, Wright, and Reeve thought they should be able to make other, better antifolates. They painstakingly analyzed the molecular structure of the enzyme they were up against, and exactly how it needed to interact with other molecules to do its job. Only by understanding its form and function could they foil versions of the enzyme they’d never seen before, Wright says.

Armed with their knowledge, they designed new antifolates. These drugs are crafted to bind the enzyme in such a way that if the enzyme changes enough to evade them, it won’t be able to do its job with vitamin B9, either. That will hopefully make it harder for bacteria to evolve resistance. The drugs’ success against the trimethoprim-resistant strains of MRSA sampled so far bodes well.

The team is now gathering more MRSA from across the country. Jeffrey Aeschlimann, an associate professor of pharmacy practice with a practice at UConn Health, says, “We’d like to determine if the resistance mechanisms we discovered in our local MRSA strains are also found in other clinics throughout the United States. We also may find other novel resistance mechanisms. In both cases, we will be able to gain even more valuable information about our how our new antibiotics work against MRSA.”