Antibiotics (Oct 2022)

Increased Susceptibility of <i>Mycobacterium tuberculosis</i> to Ethionamide by Expressing PPs-Induced Rv0560c

  • Hoonhee Seo,
  • Sukyung Kim,
  • Hafij Al Mahmud,
  • Omme Fatema Sultana,
  • Youngkyoung Lee,
  • Youjin Yoon,
  • Md Abdur Rahim,
  • Sujin Jo,
  • Jiwon Choi,
  • Saebim Lee,
  • Ho-Yeon Song

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11101349
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 10
p. 1349

Abstract

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Tuberculosis, an infectious disease, is one of the leading causes of death worldwide. Drug-resistant tuberculosis exacerbates its threat. Despite long-term and costly treatment with second-line drugs, treatment failure rates and mortality remain high. Therefore, new strategies for developing new drugs and improving the efficiency of existing drug treatments are urgently needed. Our research team reported that PPs, a new class of potential anti-tuberculosis drug candidates, can inhibit the growth of drug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Here, we report a synergistic effect of PPs with ethionamide (ETH), one of the second-line drugs, as a result of further research on PPs. While investigating gene expression changes based on microarray and 2DE (two-dimensional gel electrophoresis), it was found that PPs induced the greatest overexpression of Rv0560c in M. tuberculosis. Based on this result, a protein microarray using Rv0560c protein was performed, and it was confirmed that Rv0560c had the highest interaction with EthR, a repressor for EthA involved in activating ETH. Accordingly, a synergistic experiment was conducted under the hypothesis of increased susceptibility of ETH to M. tuberculosis by PPs. As a result, in the presence of 0.5× MIC PPs, ETH showed a growth inhibitory effect on drug-sensitive and -resistant M. tuberculosis even at a much lower concentration of about 10-fold than the original MIC of ETH. It is also suggested that the effect was due to the interaction between PPs and Rv2887, the repressor of Rv0560c. This effect was also confirmed in a mouse model of pulmonary tuberculosis, confirming the potential of PPs as a booster to enhance the susceptibility of M. tuberculosis to ETH in treating drug-resistant tuberculosis. However, more in-depth mechanistic studies and extensive animal and clinical trials are needed in the future.

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