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Functional drug screening reveals anticonvulsants as enhancers of mTOR-independent autophagic killing of Mycobacterium tuberculosis through inositol depletion

Authors :
Lucy Hepburn
Randall J. Basaraba
Stephen A. Renshaw
R.A. Floto
Beate Kampmann
Catherine Klapholz
Sandra M. Newton
Karen E. Anderson
Angeleen Fleming
Krisztina Hegyi
Robert R. Kay
Joseph Burgon
Karen Brown
Sarah Coulter
David C. Rubinsztein
Mark Schiebler
Maurizio Renna
Diane J. Ordway
Andrés Obregón-Henao
Katherine M. Henry
Phillip T. Hawkins
Marcela Henao Tamayo
Fleming, Angeleen [0000-0003-3721-7126]
Anderson, Karen E [0000-0002-7394-6660]
Hawkins, Phillip Thomas [0000-0002-6979-0464]
Rubinsztein, David [0000-0001-5002-5263]
Floto, Andres [0000-0002-2188-5659]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Schiebler, Mark
Brown, Karen
Hegyi, Krisztina
Newton, Sandra M.
Renna, Maurizio
Hepburn, Lucy
Klapholz, Catherine
Coulter, Sarah
Obregón-Henao, Andre
Henao Tamayo, Marcela
Basaraba, Randall
Kampmann, Beate
Henry, Katherine M.
Burgon, Joseph
Renshaw, Stephen A.
Fleming, Angeleen
Kay, Robert R.
Anderson, Karen E.
Hawkins, Phillip T.
Ordway, Diane J.
Rubinsztein, David C.
Floto, Rodrigo Andres
Source :
ResearcherID, EMBO Molecular Medicine
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
WILEY, 2015.

Abstract

Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB) remains a major challenge to global health made worse by the spread of multidrug resistance. We therefore examined whether stimulating intracellular killing of mycobacteria through pharmacological enhancement of macroautophagy might provide a novel therapeutic strategy. Despite the resistance of MTB to killing by basal autophagy, cell‐based screening of FDA‐approved drugs revealed two anticonvulsants, carbamazepine and valproic acid, that were able to stimulate autophagic killing of intracellular M. tuberculosis within primary human macrophages at concentrations achievable in humans. Using a zebrafish model, we show that carbamazepine can stimulate autophagy in vivo and enhance clearance of M. marinum, while in mice infected with a highly virulent multidrug‐resistant MTB strain, carbamazepine treatment reduced bacterial burden, improved lung pathology and stimulated adaptive immunity. We show that carbamazepine induces antimicrobial autophagy through a novel, evolutionarily conserved, mTOR‐independent pathway controlled by cellular depletion of myo‐inositol. While strain‐specific differences in susceptibility to in vivo carbamazepine treatment may exist, autophagy enhancement by repurposed drugs provides an easily implementable potential therapy for the treatment of multidrug‐resistant mycobacterial infection.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17574676
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ResearcherID, EMBO Molecular Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....23bf5bc2e50f6e770940b0387d6828bc