The WHO estimates gonorrhea infections occur in 78 million people globally every year. The extensive spread of antimicrobial resistant Ng has prompted the CDC to designate it as an Urgent Threat pathogen. Alarmingly, resistance is now emerging to the remaining current standard of care (SOC) dual therapy of ceftriaxone (CRO) and azithromycin (AZM). Despite this global health crisis, few new therapeutic agents are currently under clinical development to treat AMR Ng. Thus, new agents with novel mechanisms of action (MOA) not cross resistant to existing drug classes and not themselves susceptible to rapid resistance selection are needed to address the clinical spread of AMR Ng. Our proposal aims to develop a new AMR Ng therapeutic with a novel MOA not previously exploited in a clinical setting to treat GC, thereby replacing the SOC agent, CRO, and in doing so address the most serious threat of CRO-resistant Ng. We recently identified a novel and patentable analog of the natural product Moenomycin A (MoeA), we name Medinamycin (MedM). Whereas ?-lactams like CRO inhibit penicillin binding protein (PBP)-mediated transpeptidation of peptidoglycan (PG) polymers, MedM acts as a PBP transglycosylation (TG) inhibitor that abolishes PG synthesis. MedM displays exceptional Ng activity (MIC range, 0.0005-0.004 ug/ml) comparable to CRO, potent bactericidal activity, and a low frequency of resistance (FOR <1.14x10-9) similar to MoeA. MedM also exhibits an advantageous pharmacokinetic profile, highlighted by good subcutaneous exposure and long half-life anticipating single dose efficacy against AMR- Ng. Building upon a solid foundation of preliminary data, our Aims are:
Aim 1 (Phase 1; Ph1). Establish MedM MOA in Ng and development potential as a novel GC agent. Milestone 1. Obtain 50 mg of MedM and demonstrate directly in Ng that MedM + AZM FICI < 4, MedM FOR ? 1 x10-9, MedMR mutants map to Ng PBP-TG active site, and MIC90 ? 0.125 ug/ml across 25 clinical isolates. Acceptable in vitro toxicity and minimal off-target activity. Establish dose-ranging for in vivo models. Efficacy POC is achieved with favorable 50% protective dose for survival (< 10 mg/kg) for 4 days.
Aim 2 (Phase 2; Ph2). Establish MedM suitability for critical in vivo modeling. Milestone 2. Develop fermentation to provide 0.5 g MedM, demonstrate MIC90 equal or superior to ETX0914 (? 0.25 ug/ml) in 100 diverse AMR-Ng clinical isolates, and identify a formulation using a safety approved vehicle that achieves 10x MIC90 exposure in relevant species for in vivo efficacy models described in Aim 3.
Aim 3 (Ph2). Establish MedM as a drug development candidate to treat GC. Evaluate compound efficacy in a murine female gonococcal lower genital tract infection (FGLGTI) and S. aureus deep thigh infection model. Milestone 3. Demonstrate that MedM achieves 100% clearance in FGLGTI models ? 5 days IM treatment and ?3 log reduction in murine deep thigh infection model within 24 h IM treatment.

Public Health Relevance

N. gonorrhoeae (Ng) is an obligate Gram-negative human pathogen and causative agent of sexually transmitted gonorrhea. The extensive spread of antimicrobial resistant Ng has prompted the CDC to designate it as an Urgent Threat pathogen. This project will develop a therapeutic with a novel mechanism of action to combat antimicrobial resistant Ng.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Type
Small Business Innovation Research Grants (SBIR) - Phase II (R44)
Project #
5R44AI138688-03
Application #
9968004
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1)
Program Officer
Hiltke, Thomas J
Project Start
2018-06-15
Project End
2021-06-30
Budget Start
2020-07-01
Budget End
2021-06-30
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2020
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Prokaryotics, Inc.
Department
Type
DUNS #
080469236
City
Union
State
NJ
Country
United States
Zip Code
07083