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Philippe Villain-Guillot

Nosopharm SAS
Microbial Innovation for Drug Discovery
p.villainguillot@nosopharm.com

Journal articles

2013
Jessica Houard, André Aumelas, Thierry Noël, Sylvie Pages, Alain Givaudan, Valérie Fitton-Ouhabi, Philippe Villain-Guillot, Maxime Gualtieri (2013)  Cabanillasin, a new antifungal metabolite, produced by entomopathogenic Xenorhabdus cabanillasii JM26.   The Journal of antibiotics Jun  
Abstract: Since the early 1980s, fungi have emerged as a major cause of human disease. Fungal infections are associated with high levels of morbidity and mortality, and are now recognized as an important public health problem. Gram-negative bacterial strains of genus Xenorhabdus are known to form symbiotic associations with soil-dwelling nematodes of the Steinernematidae family. We describe here the discovery of a new antifungal metabolite, cabanillasin, produced by Xenorhabdus cabanillasii. We purified this molecule by cation-exchange chromatography and reverse-phase chromatography. We then determined the chemical structure of cabanillasin by homo- and heteronuclear NMR and MS-MS. Cabanillasin was found to be active against yeasts and filamentous fungi involved in opportunistic infections.The Journal of Antibiotics advance online publication, 12 June 2013; doi:10.1038/ja.2013.58.
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2009
Maxime Gualtieri, Françoise Roquet, Philippe Villain-Guillot, Martine Pugniere, Jean-Paul Leonetti (2009)  The Antibiotics in the Chemical Space.   Curr Med Chem 16: 3. 390-393  
Abstract: Ensuring the availability of new antibiotics to eradicate resistant pathogens is a critical issue, but very few new antibacterials have been recently commercialized. In an effort to rationalize their discovery process, the industry has utilized chemical library and high-throughput approaches already applied in other therapeutical areas to generate new antibiotics. This strategy has turned out to be poorly adapted to the reality of antibacterial discovery. Commercial chemical libraries contain molecules with specific molecular properties, and unfortunately systemic antibacterials are more hydrophilic and have more complex structures. These factors are critical, since hydrophobic antibiotics are generally inactive in the presence of serum. Here, we review how the skewed distribution of systemic antibiotics in chemical space influences the discovery process.
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Françoise Roquet, Maxime Gualtieri, Philippe Villain-Guillot, Martine Pugniere, Jean-Paul Leonetti (2009)  Use of a surface plasmon resonance method to investigate antibiotic and plasma protein interactions.   Antimicrob Agents Chemother 53: 4. 1528-1531 Apr  
Abstract: The pharmacologic effect of an antibiotic is directly related to its unbound concentration at the site of infection. Most commercial antibiotics have been selected in part for their low propensity to interact with serum proteins. These nonspecific interactions are classically evaluated by measuring the MIC in the presence of serum. As higher-throughput technologies tend to lose information, surface plasmon resonance (SPR) is emerging as an informative medium-throughput technology for hit validation. Here we show that SPR is a useful automatic tool for quantification of the interaction of model antibiotics with serum proteins and that it delivers precise real-time kinetic data on this critical parameter.
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2007
Philippe Villain-Guillot, Maxime Gualtieri, Lionel Bastide, Françoise Roquet, Jean Martinez, Muriel Amblard, Martine Pugniere, Jean-Paul Leonetti (2007)  Structure-activity relationships of phenyl-furanyl-rhodanines as inhibitors of RNA polymerase with antibacterial activity on biofilms.   J Med Chem 50: 17. 4195-4204 Aug  
Abstract: The dramatic rise of antibiotic-resistant bacteria over the past two decades has stressed the need for completely novel classes of antibacterial agents. Accordingly, recent advances in the study of prokaryotic transcription open new opportunities for such molecules. This paper reports the structure-activity relationships of a series of phenyl-furanyl-rhodanines (PFRs) as antibacterial inhibitors of RNA polymerase (RNAP). The molecules have been evaluated for their ability to inhibit transcription and affect growth of bacteria living in suspension or in a biofilm and for their propensity to interact with serum albumin, a critical parameter for antibacterial drug discovery. The most active of these molecules inhibit Escherichia coli RNAP transcription at concentrations of </=10 microM and have promising activities against various Gram-positive pathogens including Staphylococcus epidermidis biofilms, a major cause of nosocomial infection.
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Philippe Villain-Guillot, Lionel Bastide, Maxime Gualtieri, Jean-Paul Leonetti (2007)  Progress in targeting bacterial transcription.   Drug Discov Today 12: 5-6. 200-208 Mar  
Abstract: The bacterial RNA polymerase (RNAP) is an essential enzyme that is responsible for making RNA from a DNA template and is targeted by several antibiotics. Rifampicin was the first of such antibiotics to be described and is one of the most efficient anti-tuberculosis drugs in use. In the past five years, structural studies of bacterial RNAP and the resolution of several complexes of drugs bound to RNAP subunits have revealed molecular details of the drug-binding sites and the mechanism of drug action. This knowledge opens avenues for the development of antibiotics. Here these drugs are reviewed, together with their mechanisms and their potential interest for therapeutic applications.
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Philippe Villain-Guillot, Maxime Gualtieri, Lionel Bastide, Jean-Paul Leonetti (2007)  In vitro activities of different inhibitors of bacterial transcription against Staphylococcus epidermidis biofilm.   Antimicrob Agents Chemother 51: 9. 3117-3121 Sep  
Abstract: Staphylococcus epidermidis is a major cause of nosocomial infections because of its ability to form biofilms on the surface of medical devices. Only a few antibacterial agents are relatively active against biofilms, and rifampin, a transcription inhibitor, ranks among the most effective molecules against biofilm-related infections. Whether this efficacy is due to advantageous structural properties of rifampin or to the fact that the RNA polymerase is a favorable target remains unclear. In an attempt to answer this question, we investigated the action of different transcription inhibitors against S. epidermidis biofilm, including the newest synthetic transcription inhibitors. This comparison suggests that most of the antibiotics that target the RNA polymerase are active on S. epidermidis biofilms at concentrations close to their MICs. One of these compounds, CBR703, despite its high MIC ranks among the best antibiotics to eradicate biofilm-embedded bacteria.
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2006
Maxime Gualtieri, Lionel Bastide, Philippe Villain-Guillot, Sylvie Michaux-Charachon, Jaqueline Latouche, Jean-Paul Leonetti (2006)  In vitro activity of a new antibacterial rhodanine derivative against Staphylococcus epidermidis biofilms.   J Antimicrob Chemother 58: 4. 778-783 Oct  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: Staphylococcus epidermidis biofilms form at the surface of implants and prostheses and are responsible for the failure of many antibiotic therapies. Only a few antibiotics are relatively active against biofilms, and rifampicin, a transcription inhibitor, is among the most effective molecules for treating biofilm-related infections. Having recently selected a new potential transcription inhibitor, we attempted to evaluate its efficacy against S. epidermidis biofilms. METHODS: Biofilm-forming S. epidermidis strains were grown planktonically or as biofilms and their susceptibility to this transcription inhibitor was compared with reference antibiotics with different mechanisms of action. CONCLUSIONS: Our results demonstrate that this new molecule is active; its effects are fast and kinetically related to those of rifampicin, but unlike rifampicin it does not select for resistant bacteria.
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Estelle André, Lionel Bastide, Sylvie Michaux-Charachon, Anne Gouby, Philippe Villain-Guillot, Jaqueline Latouche, Aurélie Bouchet, Maxime Gualtieri, Jean-Paul Leonetti (2006)  Novel synthetic molecules targeting the bacterial RNA polymerase assembly.   J Antimicrob Chemother 57: 2. 245-251 Feb  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: Despite extensive functional screening of the bacterial RNA polymerase (RNAP) over the past years, very few novel inhibitors have been reported. We have, therefore, decided to screen with a radically different, non-enzymic, protein-protein interaction assay. Our target is the highly conserved RNAP-sigma interaction that is essential for transcription. METHODS: Small molecule inhibitors of the RNAP-sigma interaction were tested for their activity on transcription and on bacteria. RESULTS: These compounds have antibacterial activity against Gram-positive bacteria including multiresistant clinical isolates. CONCLUSIONS: This is, to our knowledge, the first example of a small molecule inhibitor of this interaction.
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2004
Estelle André, Lionel Bastide, Philippe Villain-Guillot, Jaqueline Latouche, Joelle Rouby, Jean-Paul Leonetti (2004)  A multiwell assay to isolate compounds inhibiting the assembly of the prokaryotic RNA polymerase.   Assay Drug Dev Technol 2: 6. 629-635 Dec  
Abstract: We have developed a multiwell assay for the detection of modulators of prokaryotic transcription based on the quantification of protein-protein interaction. This assay consists of three steps: (a) the immobilization of the Escherichia coli protein sigma70 in the well, (b) the incubation of the immobilized protein with core RNA polymerase and a potential inhibitor, and (c) washing and quantification of the binding of core to sigma70 with a monoclonal antibody conjugated to horseradish peroxidase. We show that this assay is sensitive, reproducible, and robust, and is able to discriminate between control competitors with different affinities. We demonstrate the usefulness of the assay to screen for microbial RNA polymerase inhibitors as potential new drugs for the treatment of emerging antibiotic-resistant bacteria.
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