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The Antifungal Activity of HMA, an Amiloride Analog and Inhibitor of Na(+)/H(+) Exchangers

One path toward identifying effective and easily accessible antifungals is to repurpose commonly used drugs. Amiloride, a widely used diuretic, inhibits different isoforms of Na(+)/H(+) exchangers, Na(+) channels, and Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchangers. Here, we found that amiloride had poor antifungal activit...

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Autores principales: Vu, Kiem, Blumwald, Eduardo, Gelli, Angie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8133316/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34025629
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2021.673035
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author Vu, Kiem
Blumwald, Eduardo
Gelli, Angie
author_facet Vu, Kiem
Blumwald, Eduardo
Gelli, Angie
author_sort Vu, Kiem
collection PubMed
description One path toward identifying effective and easily accessible antifungals is to repurpose commonly used drugs. Amiloride, a widely used diuretic, inhibits different isoforms of Na(+)/H(+) exchangers, Na(+) channels, and Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchangers. Here, we found that amiloride had poor antifungal activity against isolates of Cryptococcus prompting the examination of the amiloride analog, HMA [5-(N,N-hexamethylene)amiloride]. HMA possesses strong activity against Na(+)/H(+) exchangers (NHEs) and little K(+)-associated toxicity since HMA has only minimal inhibitory effects toward epithelial sodium channels (ENaC), the diuretic and antikaliuretic target of amiloride. Although HMA produced a robust dose-dependent growth inhibition of several fungal isolates, susceptibility assays revealed modest MICs against isolates of Cryptococcus. A checkerboard dilution strategy resulted in fractional inhibitory concentrations (FIC) < 0.5, suggesting that HMA displays synergy with several antifungal azole drugs including posaconazole, voriconazole, and ketoconazole. Itraconazole and ravuconazole showed moderate synergy with HMA across all tested fungal isolates. In combination with HMA, ravuconazole had MICs of 0.004–0.008 μg/ml, a ∼16-fold reduction compared to MICs of ravuconazole when used alone and significantly more effective than the overall MIC(90) (0.25 μg/ml) reported for ravuconazole against 541 clinical isolates of Cryptococcus neoformans. In combination with azole drugs, MICs of HMA ranged from 3.2 μM (1 μg/ml) to 26 μM (16 μg/ml), HMA was not cytotoxic at concentrations ≤ 8 μg/ml, but MICs were above the reported HMA K(i) of 0.013–2.4 μM for various Na(+)/H(+) exchangers. Our results suggest that HMA has limited potential as a monotherapy and may have additional targets in fungal/yeast cells since strains lacking NHEs remained sensitive to HMA. We determined that the hydrophobic substituent at the 5-amino group of HMA is likely responsible for the observed antifungal activity and synergy with several azoles since derivatives with bulky polar substitutions showed no activity against Cryptococcus, indicating that other 5-substituted HMA derivatives could possess stronger antifungal activity. Moreover, substitution of other positions around the pyrazine core of HMA has not been investigated but could reveal new leads for antifungal drug development.
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spelling pubmed-81333162021-05-20 The Antifungal Activity of HMA, an Amiloride Analog and Inhibitor of Na(+)/H(+) Exchangers Vu, Kiem Blumwald, Eduardo Gelli, Angie Front Microbiol Microbiology One path toward identifying effective and easily accessible antifungals is to repurpose commonly used drugs. Amiloride, a widely used diuretic, inhibits different isoforms of Na(+)/H(+) exchangers, Na(+) channels, and Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchangers. Here, we found that amiloride had poor antifungal activity against isolates of Cryptococcus prompting the examination of the amiloride analog, HMA [5-(N,N-hexamethylene)amiloride]. HMA possesses strong activity against Na(+)/H(+) exchangers (NHEs) and little K(+)-associated toxicity since HMA has only minimal inhibitory effects toward epithelial sodium channels (ENaC), the diuretic and antikaliuretic target of amiloride. Although HMA produced a robust dose-dependent growth inhibition of several fungal isolates, susceptibility assays revealed modest MICs against isolates of Cryptococcus. A checkerboard dilution strategy resulted in fractional inhibitory concentrations (FIC) < 0.5, suggesting that HMA displays synergy with several antifungal azole drugs including posaconazole, voriconazole, and ketoconazole. Itraconazole and ravuconazole showed moderate synergy with HMA across all tested fungal isolates. In combination with HMA, ravuconazole had MICs of 0.004–0.008 μg/ml, a ∼16-fold reduction compared to MICs of ravuconazole when used alone and significantly more effective than the overall MIC(90) (0.25 μg/ml) reported for ravuconazole against 541 clinical isolates of Cryptococcus neoformans. In combination with azole drugs, MICs of HMA ranged from 3.2 μM (1 μg/ml) to 26 μM (16 μg/ml), HMA was not cytotoxic at concentrations ≤ 8 μg/ml, but MICs were above the reported HMA K(i) of 0.013–2.4 μM for various Na(+)/H(+) exchangers. Our results suggest that HMA has limited potential as a monotherapy and may have additional targets in fungal/yeast cells since strains lacking NHEs remained sensitive to HMA. We determined that the hydrophobic substituent at the 5-amino group of HMA is likely responsible for the observed antifungal activity and synergy with several azoles since derivatives with bulky polar substitutions showed no activity against Cryptococcus, indicating that other 5-substituted HMA derivatives could possess stronger antifungal activity. Moreover, substitution of other positions around the pyrazine core of HMA has not been investigated but could reveal new leads for antifungal drug development. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-05-05 /pmc/articles/PMC8133316/ /pubmed/34025629 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2021.673035 Text en Copyright © 2021 Vu, Blumwald and Gelli. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Microbiology
Vu, Kiem
Blumwald, Eduardo
Gelli, Angie
The Antifungal Activity of HMA, an Amiloride Analog and Inhibitor of Na(+)/H(+) Exchangers
title The Antifungal Activity of HMA, an Amiloride Analog and Inhibitor of Na(+)/H(+) Exchangers
title_full The Antifungal Activity of HMA, an Amiloride Analog and Inhibitor of Na(+)/H(+) Exchangers
title_fullStr The Antifungal Activity of HMA, an Amiloride Analog and Inhibitor of Na(+)/H(+) Exchangers
title_full_unstemmed The Antifungal Activity of HMA, an Amiloride Analog and Inhibitor of Na(+)/H(+) Exchangers
title_short The Antifungal Activity of HMA, an Amiloride Analog and Inhibitor of Na(+)/H(+) Exchangers
title_sort antifungal activity of hma, an amiloride analog and inhibitor of na(+)/h(+) exchangers
topic Microbiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8133316/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34025629
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2021.673035
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