Journal of Advanced Pharmaceutical Technology & Research (Jul 2024)

Glucomannan is a promising isoniazid’s enhancer that inducing macrophage phagocytosis

  • Bernadette Dian Novita,
  • Widya Wasiyastuti,
  • Yudy Tjahjono,
  • Hendy Wijaya,
  • Wuryanto Hadinugroho,
  • Sumi Wijaya,
  • Lisa Soegianto,
  • Imelda Theodora,
  • Elisabeth Tri Wahyuni Widoretno,
  • Kevin Samsudin,
  • Alvin Julian

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/japtr.japtr_96_24
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 3
pp. 237 – 241

Abstract

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Isoniazid (INH) is a frontline antituberculosis agent effective against Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), but the increasing challenge of avoiding multidrug-resistant tuberculosis, including INH resistance, necessitates innovative approaches. This study focused on enhancing macrophage phagocytosis to overcome INH resistance. Glucomannan, an immunomodulatory polysaccharide, emerged as a potential macrophage activator. Our objective was to characterize the glucomannan-INH mixture and assess its impact on INH efficacy and macrophage activity. Detailed examination of the glucomannan from Amorphophallus muelleri (0.05%–0.2%) was performed in several methods. INH sensitivity tests were carried out with the Mtb strain H37RV on Löwenstein–Jensen medium. Murine macrophage (RAW264.7) viability and activity were evaluated through MTT and latex bead phagocytosis assays. Ultraviolet-wavelength spectrophotometry was used to analyze chemical structure changes. Glucomannan (0.05%–0.2%) significantly enhanced murine macrophage viability and activity. When glucomannan was combined with INH, the IC50 value was greater compared to INH only. Phagocytosis assays revealed heightened macrophage activity in the presence of 0.05% and 0.1% glucomannan. Importantly, glucomannan did not compromise INH efficacy or alter its chemical structure. This study underscores the potential of glucomannan, particularly with a lower molecular weight, as a promising enhancer of INH, boosting macrophage phagocytosis against INH-resistant Mtb. These findings challenge the assumptions about the impact of glucomannan on drug absorption and prompt potential reevaluation. While specific receptors for glucomannan in macrophage phagocytosis require further exploration, the complement receptors are proposed to be potential mediators.

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