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The small-molecule SMARt751 reverses Mycobacterium tuberculosis resistance to ethionamide in acute and chronic mouse models of tuberculosis

Authors :
Marion Flipo
Rosangela Frita
Marilyne Bourotte
María S. Martínez-Martínez
Markus Boesche
Gary W. Boyle
Geo Derimanov
Gerard Drewes
Pablo Gamallo
Sonja Ghidelli-Disse
Stephanie Gresham
Elena Jiménez
Jaime de Mercado
Esther Pérez-Herrán
Esther Porras-De Francisco
Joaquín Rullas
Patricia Casado
Florence Leroux
Catherine Piveteau
Mehdi Kiass
Vanessa Mathys
Karine Soetaert
Véronique Megalizzi
Abdalkarim Tanina
René Wintjens
Rudy Antoine
Priscille Brodin
Vincent Delorme
Martin Moune
Kamel Djaout
Stéphanie Slupek
Christian Kemmer
Marc Gitzinger
Lluis Ballell
Alfonso Mendoza-Losana
Sergio Lociuro
Benoit Deprez
David Barros-Aguirre
Modesto J. Remuiñán
Nicolas Willand
Alain R. Baulard
Source :
Science Translational Medicine. 14
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2022.

Abstract

The sensitivity of Mycobacterium tuberculosis , the pathogen that causes tuberculosis (TB), to antibiotic prodrugs is dependent on the efficacy of the activation process that transforms the prodrugs into their active antibacterial moieties. Various oxidases of M. tuberculosis have the potential to activate the prodrug ethionamide. Here, we used medicinal chemistry coupled with a phenotypic assay to select the N-acylated 4-phenylpiperidine compound series. The lead compound, SMARt751, interacted with the transcriptional regulator VirS of M. tuberculosis , which regulates the mymA operon encoding a monooxygenase that activates ethionamide. SMARt751 boosted the efficacy of ethionamide in vitro and in mouse models of acute and chronic TB. SMARt751 also restored full efficacy of ethionamide in mice infected with M. tuberculosis strains carrying mutations in the ethA gene, which cause ethionamide resistance in the clinic. SMARt751 was shown to be safe in tests conducted in vitro and in vivo. A model extrapolating animal pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic parameters to humans predicted that as little as 25 mg of SMARt751 daily would allow a fourfold reduction in the dose of ethionamide administered while retaining the same efficacy and reducing side effects.

Subjects

Subjects :
General Medicine

Details

ISSN :
19466242 and 19466234
Volume :
14
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science Translational Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........ceee95809e2bca056e0d0c0c3d88cddd
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1126/scitranslmed.aaz6280