2 research outputs found

    Nitroimidazopyrazinones with Oral Activity against Tuberculosis and Chagas Disease in Mouse Models of Infection.

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    Tuberculosis and parasitic infections continue to impose a significant threat to global public health and economic growth. There is an urgent need to develop new treatments to combat these diseases. Here, we report the in vitro and in vivo profiles of a new bicyclic nitroimidazole subclass, namely, nitroimidazopyrazinones, against mycobacteria and Trypanosoma cruzi. Derivatives with monocyclic side chains were selective against Mycobacterium tuberculosis and were able to reduce the bacterial load when dosed orally in mice. We demonstrated that deazaflavin-dependent nitroreductase (Ddn) could act effectively on nitroimidazopyrazinones, indicating the potential of Ddn as an activating enzyme for these new compounds in M. tuberculosis. Oral administration of compounds with extended biaryl side chains (73 and 74) was effective in suppressing infection in an acute T. cruzi-infected murine model. These findings demonstrate that active nitroimidazopyrazinones have potential to be developed as orally available clinical candidates against both tuberculosis and Chagas disease

    Repurposing a neurodegenerative disease drug to treat Gram-negative antibiotic-resistant bacterial sepsis

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    The emergence of polymyxin resistance in carbapenem-resistant and extended-spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL)-producing bacteria is a critical threat to human health, and alternative treatment strategies are urgently required. We investigated the ability of the hydroxyquinoline analog ionophore PBT2 to restore antibiotic sensitivity in polymyxin-resistant, ESBL-producing, carbapenem-resistant Gram-negative human pathogens. PBT2 resensitized Klebsiella pneumoniae, Escherichia coil, Acinetobacter baumannii, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa to last-resort polymyxin class antibiotics, including the less toxic next-generation polymyxin derivative FADDI-287, in vitro. We were unable to select for mutants resistant to PBT2 + FADDI-287 in polymyxin-resistant E. coli containing a plasmidborne mcr-1 gene or K. pneumoniae carrying a chromosomal mgrB mutation. Using a highly invasive K. pneumoniae strain engineered for polymyxin resistance through mgrB mutation, we successfully demonstrated the efficacy of PBT2 + polymyxin (colistin or FADDI-287) for the treatment of Gram-negative sepsis in immunocompetent mice. In comparison to polymyxin alone, the combination of PBT2 + polymyxin improved survival and reduced bacterial dissemination to the lungs and spleen of infected mice. These data present a treatment modality to break antibiotic resistance in high-priority polymyxin-resistant Gram-negative pathogens
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