Indole Alkaloids and Halogenated Phenazines: Platforms for Discovery

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R35 · $265,981 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Abstract. Small molecule probes are critical to the investigation and treatment of human diseases. Our group is exploring the basic biology of various human diseases (e.g., cancer, opioid addiction, malaria, bacterial biofilms) using an array of new small molecule probes. During this award, we will advance our ring distortion platform using a panel of readily available indole alkaloids as starting points for the dramatic altering of their complex ring systems leveraging dearomative cycloadditions along with other chemoselective reactions. Active compounds identified from our ring distortion platform have gained new biological functions as their activities are unrelated to their parent natural product and other scaffolds. In essence, we have re-engineered the biological activities of select indole alkaloids to study diverse disease states and now we aim to explore the modes of action regarding these new probes. This basic (chemical synthesis) technology has served as a launching point to discover and explore new biology in multiple disease areas. We will develop probes for transcript profiling experiments and/or target identification expeditions, as necessary. In addition, we have identified a series of halogenated phenazines (HP) that demonstrate potent antibacterial and biofilm-eradicating activities against critical Gram-positive pathogens. These findings are significant as bacterial biofilms, or surface-attached bacterial communities, house persistent, non-replicating bacteria (“persister cells”) that demonstrate tolerance to all classes of antibiotics. Biofilms pose a significant threat to human health as 17 million new biofilm- associated infections occur annually that result in 550,000 deaths in the United States. During this award, we aim to expand the spectrum of activity for halogenated phenazine agents and eradicate Gram-negative bacterial pathogens through the development of new phenazine-forming reactions to incorporate primary amine moieties (following eNTRy rule guidelines) and develop HP-sideromycin agents to target specific Gram- negative species. New biofilm-eradicating agents can provide critical insights into the basic biology of Gram- negative biofilm cell viability and could lead to ground-breaking cures for persistent bacterial infections in the future.

Key facts

NIH application ID
11138315
Project number
7R35GM153272-02
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA
Principal Investigator
Robert William Huigens
Activity code
R35
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2024
Award amount
$265,981
Award type
7
Project period
2024-04-01 → 2029-01-31