Discovery and development of a new oxazolidinone with reduced toxicity for the treatment of tuberculosis.

Journal:
Nature medicine, Volume: 32, Issue: 2
Published:
February 13, 2026
PMID:
41530381
Authors:
Brendan M Crowley BM, Helena I Boshoff HI, Aidan Boving A, Vee Y Tan VY, Jianghai Zhu J, Forrest Hoyt F, Randy R Miller RR, Julie Ehrhart J, Christopher W Boyce CW, Katherine Young K, Philippe G Nantermet PG, Jing Su J, Lihu Yang L, Ronald E Painter RE, Emily B Corcoran EB, Jason L Hoar JL, Sangmi Oh S, David L Holtzman DL, Micha Levi M, Aparna Anderson A, Monicah A Otieno MA, Matthew Zimmerman M, Firat Kaya F, Lisa M Massoudi LM, Michelle E Ramey ME, Allison A Bauman AA, Anne J Lenaerts AJ, Gregory T Roberston GT, Véronique Dartois V, Charles D Wells CD, Clifton E Barry CE, David B Olsen DB
Abstract:

Linezolid, an oxazolidinone, is a cornerstone of treatment regimens for highly drug-resistant tuberculosis but cannot be used in drug-susceptible disease because of toxicity. This toxicity results from inhibition of mammalian mitochondrial protein synthesis. Here we show the development of a new oxazolidinone, MK-7762, with antitubercular activity that is better than linezolid and limited mitochondrial protein synthesis inhibition. The cryogenic electron microscopy structure of the stalled mycobacterial ribosome with MK-7762 revealed the basis for this selectivity. BALB/c mouse models of disease showed MK-7762 reduced lung bacterial burden by a 3-log-fold decrease in an acute model (N = 18) and a 2-log-fold decrease in chronically infected animals (N = 18). MK-7762 showed lesion penetration similar to linezolid in C3HeB/FeJ mice. MK-7762 had pharmacokinetic properties predicting low once-daily doses in humans and a favorable 14-day preclinical safety profile in Wistar Han rats (N = 30) and Beagle dogs (N = 6). Four-month safety studies in both rats (N = 20) and dogs (N = 24) showed no changes in hematology parameters at exposures well above the 100-mg predicted human dose. These data will enable MK-7762 to be explored as a component of new tuberculosis treatment combinations for all forms of the disease.


Courtesy of the U.S. National Library of Medicine