5 research outputs found

    Using diphenyleneiodonium to induce a viable but non-culturable phenotype in Mycobacterium tuberculosis and its metabolomics analysis.

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    Depletion of oxygen levels is a well-accepted model for induction of non-replicating, persistent states in mycobacteria. Increasing the stress levels in mycobacterium bacilli facilitates their entry into a non-cultivable, dormant state. In this study, it was shown that diphenyleneiodonium, an inhibitor of NADH oxidase, induced a viable, but non-culturable state in mycobacteria, having similar features to dormant bacilli, like loss of acid-fastness, upregulation of stress-regulated genes and decreased superoxide levels as compared to actively growing bacilli. Comprehensive, untargeted metabolic profiling also confirmed a decrease in biogenesis of amino acids, NAD, unsaturated fatty acids and nucleotides. Additionally, an increase in the level of lactate, fumarate, succinate and pentose phosphate pathways along with increased mycothiol and sulfate metabolites, similar to dormant bacilli, was observed in the granuloma. These non-cultivable bacilli were resuscitated by supplementation of fetal bovine serum, regaining their culturability in liquid as well as on agar medium. This study focused on the effect of diphenyleneiodonium treatment in causing mycobacteria to rapidly transition from an active state into a viable, but non-cultivable state, and comparing their characteristics with dormant phenotypes

    GSH Induced Controlled Release of Levofloxacin from a Purpose-Built Prodrug: Luminescence Response for Probing the Drug Releasein Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus

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    Fluoroquinolones are third-generation broad spectrum bactericidal antibiotics and work against both Grampositive and Gram-negative bacteria. Levofloxacin (L), a fluoroquinolone, is widely used in anti-infective chemotherapy and treatment of urinary tract infection and pneumonia. The main pathogen for urinary tract infections is Escherichia coli, and Streptococcus pneumoniae is responsible for pneumonia, predominantly a lower respiratory tract infection. Poor permeability of L leads to the use of higher dose of this drug and excess drug in the outer cellular fluid leads to central nervous system (CNS) abnormality. One way to counter this is to improve the lipophilicity of the drug molecule, and accordingly, we have synthesized two new Levofloxacin derivatives, which participated in the spatiotemporal release of drug via disulfide bond cleavage induced by glutathione (GSH). Recent studies with Streptococcus mutants suggest that it is localized in epithelial lining fluid (ELF) of the normal lower respiratory tract and the effective [GSH] in ELF is ∼430 μM. E. coli typically cause urinary tract infections and the concentration of GSH in porcine bladder epithelium is reported as 0.6 mM for a healthy human. Thus, for the present study we have chosen two important bacteria (Gram + ve and Gram − ve), which are operational in regions having high extracellular GSH concentration. Interestingly, this supports our design of new lipophilic Levofloxacin based prodrugs, which released effective drug on reaction with GSH. Higher lipophilicity favored improved uptake of the prodrugs. Site specific release of the drug (L) could be achieved following a glutathione mediated biochemical transformation process through cleavage of a disulfide bond of these purpose-built prodrugs. Further, appropriate design helped us to demonstrate that it is possible also to control the kinetics of the drug release from respective prodrugs. Associated luminescence enhancement helps in probing the release of the drug from the prodrug in bacteria and helps in elucidating the mechanistic pathway of the transformation. Such an example is scarce in the contemporary literatur
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