Identification of a new series of benzothiazinone derivatives with excellent antitubercular activity and improved pharmacokinetic profiles†
Abstract
Nitrobenzothiazinone (BTZ) is a promising scaffold with potent activity against M. tuberculosis by inhibiting decaprenylphosphoryl-beta-D-ribose 2′-oxidase (DprE1). But unfavorable durability poses a challenge to further development of this class of agents. Herein, a series of BTZs bearing a variety of different substituents at the C-2 position were designed and synthesized. Compounds were screened for their antimycobacterial activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Ra and were profiled for metabolic stability, plasma protein-binding capacity and pharmacokinetics in vivo. In general, these new BTZs containing N-piperazine, N-piperidine or N-piperidone moiety have excellent antitubercular activity and low cytotoxicity. Several of the compounds showed improved microsomal stability and lower plasma protein-binding, opening a new direction for further lead optimization. And we obtained compound 3o, which maintained good anti-tuberculosis activity (MIC = 8 nM) and presented better in vitro ADME/T and in vivo pharmacokinetic profiles than reported BTZ compound PBTZ169, which may serve as a candidate for the treatment of tuberculosis.