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      Para-aminosalicylic acid acts as an alternative substrate of folate metabolism in Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

      Science (New York, N.Y.)
      Aminosalicylic Acid, metabolism, pharmacology, Antitubercular Agents, Dihydropteroate Synthase, antagonists & inhibitors, Folic Acid, Molecular Mimicry, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, drug effects, Prodrugs, Substrate Specificity

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          Abstract

          Folate biosynthesis is an established anti-infective target, and the antifolate para-aminosalicylic acid (PAS) was one of the first anti-infectives introduced into clinical practice on the basis of target-based drug discovery. Fifty years later, PAS continues to be used to treat tuberculosis. PAS is assumed to inhibit dihydropteroate synthase (DHPS) in Mycobacterium tuberculosis by mimicking the substrate p-aminobenzoate (PABA). However, we found that sulfonamide inhibitors of DHPS inhibited growth of M. tuberculosis only weakly because of their intracellular metabolism. In contrast, PAS served as a replacement substrate for DHPS. Products of PAS metabolism at this and subsequent steps in folate metabolism inhibited those enzymes, competing with their substrates. PAS is thus a prodrug that blocks growth of M. tuberculosis when its active forms are generated by enzymes in the pathway they poison.

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