Addressing the terrifying issue of multi-drug resistant bacterial and fungal pathogens using synthetic organic chemistry

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About This Project

The synthesis of compounds inspired by the molecules of nature is a proven strategy for discovering new anti-infective compounds. The Kasugamycin family of natural products has clinically relevant antifungal and antibacterial properties. We will use our laboratory's technology to make and test analogues of (+)-Kasugamycin for antifungal and antibacterial activity. We hypothesize that this will create a library of useful "drug-like" Kasugamycin analogues for further development.

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What is the context of this research?

Since the commercialization of penicillin, antibiotics have been hailed as “magic bullets”. In recent years, however, the number of bacterial strains resistant to clinically used antibiotics has sharply increased, and the economic burden from this is projected to be ~$159 billion dollars. Thus, the development of antibiotics with new mechanisms of action for the control of pernicious bacterial infections is of vital importance. The main mission of my laboratory at the University of Kansas Department of Medicinal Chemistry is to reduce human morbidity and mortality through innovation in synthetic organic chemistry. In this project, we will synthesize molecules in the Kasugamycin family of aminoglycoside antibiotics with the goal of finding a pre-clinical "hit" compound, which can be evolved in future medicinal chemistry efforts into a clinical trial candidate.

What is the significance of this project?

The first step in drug-discovery is the generation of pre-clinical "hit" compounds that have favorable activity and toxicity profiles and the evolution of these "hits" into lead compounds for clinical trials. The Kasugamycin family of aminoglycosides includes members that have commercially relevant agricultural fungicidal activity and clinically relevant anti-tubercular activity. We aim to use this family of natural products as inspiration for the assembly of a library of simplified analogues that will retain the attractive antibiotic features of the parent compounds but that will be more "drug-like". If successful, this project will allow for access to a diverse collection of antibacterial compounds with distinct modes of action from FDA approved antibiotics. This will complete many important pre-clinical steps towards the development of new clinically relevant antibiotics. The ultimate goal of this research is to reduce the burden of bacterial infections.

What are the goals of the project?

Over the 1-year duration of this project, we will synthesize a library of simplified Kasugamycin analogues (~50 analogues in total) and will evaluate their activity using a suite of in silico, in vitro, and in vivo assays. We are experts in synthetic organic chemistry and will use our "in-house" expertise to synthesize a collection of simplified, structurally modified analogues to improve drug-like properties and lower background cytotoxicity while maintaining the on-target antibacterial activity of the parent compounds. Our plan for these analogues will be guided by function/diversity-oriented synthesis principles and in silico structure-based design. In collaboration with core laboratories at the University of Kansas and at Kansas State University, we will evaluate the antibacterial activity in vitro, and promising analogues will be tested for toxicity in mice.

Budget

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Funding is requested to defray the costs of equipment and reagents needed to complete the project. Some examples of the reagents needed are the chemicals used in the synthetic sequence as well as the solvents required for both the reactions and the purification of compounds (hexanes, ethyl acetate, acetonitrile, methanol). Each new chemical compound must be rigorously characterized using NMR spectroscopy and mass spectrometric techniques. A portion of these funds will allow us to pay for the instrumentation costs charged by the core labs at the University of Kansas which maintain these delicate instruments.

Funds raised here will augment existing support from the National Institutes of Health to address the pressing problem of multi-drug resistant bacterial and fungal pathogens.

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Antibiotic resistance is one of the most pressing issues for medicine in the 21st century, and the development of new methods for rapid analoguing of existing small molecule antibiotic scaffolds is a straightforward approach with a high likelihood of success to address the growing need for new antibiotics. Dr. Sathyamoorthi's lab has a track record of developing state-of-the art chemical techniques with an emphasis on pragmatism, scalability and reproducibility, and I have full confidence his approach will deliver on these goals.

Project Timeline

I expect that the funding requested will allow for a full year of research. In this time, I expect that we will make significant progress towards the syntheses of the antibiotic targets of interest. In parallel, we will test the antibacterial activity and toxicity of simplified analogues.

Any funders will be acknowledged in publications and presentations arising from this work.

Nov 20, 2025

Project Launched

Jan 05, 2026

Project Start

Jun 01, 2026

Synthesis of Kasugamycin analogues (first 25).

Nov 09, 2026

Synthesis of Kasugamycin analogues (second 25).

Dec 15, 2026

Testing for antibacterial activity and toxicity.

Meet the Team

Shyam Sathyamoorthi
Shyam Sathyamoorthi
Associate Professor

Affiliates

Department of Medicinal Chemistry (University of Kansas)
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Shyam Sathyamoorthi

Shyam Sathyamoorthi completed a B.S. degree in Cell and Molecular Biology with a minor in Chemistry at Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana, where he worked in the labs of Professor Ken Muneoka and Professor Robert A. Pascal, Jr. He then completed a PhD in chemistry at Stanford University under the guidance of Professor Richard N. Zare (2018) as well as a Doctor of Medicine degree at the Stanford University School of Medicine (2019). In July 2019, he started his independent career as an assistant professor in the Department of Medicinal Chemistry at the University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, USA. He was promoted to associate professor (with tenure) in 2024.

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