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Efficacy of epetraborole against Mycobacterium abscessus is increased with norvaline

Mycobacterium abscessus is the most common rapidly growing non-tuberculous mycobacteria to cause pulmonary disease in patients with impaired lung function such as cystic fibrosis. M. abscessus displays high intrinsic resistance to common antibiotics and inducible resistance to macrolides like clarit...

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Autores principales: Sullivan, Jaryd R., Lupien, Andréanne, Kalthoff, Elias, Hamela, Claire, Taylor, Lorne, Munro, Kim A., Schmeing, T. Martin, Kremer, Laurent, Behr, Marcel A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8535176/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34637487
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1009965
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author Sullivan, Jaryd R.
Lupien, Andréanne
Kalthoff, Elias
Hamela, Claire
Taylor, Lorne
Munro, Kim A.
Schmeing, T. Martin
Kremer, Laurent
Behr, Marcel A.
author_facet Sullivan, Jaryd R.
Lupien, Andréanne
Kalthoff, Elias
Hamela, Claire
Taylor, Lorne
Munro, Kim A.
Schmeing, T. Martin
Kremer, Laurent
Behr, Marcel A.
author_sort Sullivan, Jaryd R.
collection PubMed
description Mycobacterium abscessus is the most common rapidly growing non-tuberculous mycobacteria to cause pulmonary disease in patients with impaired lung function such as cystic fibrosis. M. abscessus displays high intrinsic resistance to common antibiotics and inducible resistance to macrolides like clarithromycin. As such, M. abscessus is clinically resistant to the entire regimen of front-line M. tuberculosis drugs, and treatment with antibiotics that do inhibit M. abscessus in the lab results in cure rates of 50% or less. Here, we identified epetraborole (EPT) from the MMV pandemic response box as an inhibitor against the essential protein leucyl-tRNA synthetase (LeuRS) in M. abscessus. EPT protected zebrafish from lethal M. abscessus infection and did not induce self-resistance nor against clarithromycin. Contrary to most antimycobacterials, the whole-cell activity of EPT was greater against M. abscessus than M. tuberculosis, but crystallographic and equilibrium binding data showed that EPT binds LeuRS(Mabs) and LeuRS(Mtb) with similar residues and dissociation constants. Since EPT-resistant M. abscessus mutants lost LeuRS editing activity, these mutants became susceptible to misaminoacylation with leucine mimics like the non-proteinogenic amino acid norvaline. Proteomic analysis revealed that when M. abscessus LeuRS mutants were fed norvaline, leucine residues in proteins were replaced by norvaline, inducing the unfolded protein response with temporal changes in expression of GroEL chaperonins and Clp proteases. This supports our in vitro data that supplementation of media with norvaline reduced the emergence of EPT mutants in both M. abscessus and M. tuberculosis. Furthermore, the combination of EPT and norvaline had improved in vivo efficacy compared to EPT in a murine model of M. abscessus infection. Our results emphasize the effectiveness of EPT against the clinically relevant cystic fibrosis pathogen M. abscessus, and these findings also suggest norvaline adjunct therapy with EPT could be beneficial for M. abscessus and other mycobacterial infections like tuberculosis.
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spelling pubmed-85351762021-10-23 Efficacy of epetraborole against Mycobacterium abscessus is increased with norvaline Sullivan, Jaryd R. Lupien, Andréanne Kalthoff, Elias Hamela, Claire Taylor, Lorne Munro, Kim A. Schmeing, T. Martin Kremer, Laurent Behr, Marcel A. PLoS Pathog Research Article Mycobacterium abscessus is the most common rapidly growing non-tuberculous mycobacteria to cause pulmonary disease in patients with impaired lung function such as cystic fibrosis. M. abscessus displays high intrinsic resistance to common antibiotics and inducible resistance to macrolides like clarithromycin. As such, M. abscessus is clinically resistant to the entire regimen of front-line M. tuberculosis drugs, and treatment with antibiotics that do inhibit M. abscessus in the lab results in cure rates of 50% or less. Here, we identified epetraborole (EPT) from the MMV pandemic response box as an inhibitor against the essential protein leucyl-tRNA synthetase (LeuRS) in M. abscessus. EPT protected zebrafish from lethal M. abscessus infection and did not induce self-resistance nor against clarithromycin. Contrary to most antimycobacterials, the whole-cell activity of EPT was greater against M. abscessus than M. tuberculosis, but crystallographic and equilibrium binding data showed that EPT binds LeuRS(Mabs) and LeuRS(Mtb) with similar residues and dissociation constants. Since EPT-resistant M. abscessus mutants lost LeuRS editing activity, these mutants became susceptible to misaminoacylation with leucine mimics like the non-proteinogenic amino acid norvaline. Proteomic analysis revealed that when M. abscessus LeuRS mutants were fed norvaline, leucine residues in proteins were replaced by norvaline, inducing the unfolded protein response with temporal changes in expression of GroEL chaperonins and Clp proteases. This supports our in vitro data that supplementation of media with norvaline reduced the emergence of EPT mutants in both M. abscessus and M. tuberculosis. Furthermore, the combination of EPT and norvaline had improved in vivo efficacy compared to EPT in a murine model of M. abscessus infection. Our results emphasize the effectiveness of EPT against the clinically relevant cystic fibrosis pathogen M. abscessus, and these findings also suggest norvaline adjunct therapy with EPT could be beneficial for M. abscessus and other mycobacterial infections like tuberculosis. Public Library of Science 2021-10-12 /pmc/articles/PMC8535176/ /pubmed/34637487 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1009965 Text en © 2021 Sullivan et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sullivan, Jaryd R.
Lupien, Andréanne
Kalthoff, Elias
Hamela, Claire
Taylor, Lorne
Munro, Kim A.
Schmeing, T. Martin
Kremer, Laurent
Behr, Marcel A.
Efficacy of epetraborole against Mycobacterium abscessus is increased with norvaline
title Efficacy of epetraborole against Mycobacterium abscessus is increased with norvaline
title_full Efficacy of epetraborole against Mycobacterium abscessus is increased with norvaline
title_fullStr Efficacy of epetraborole against Mycobacterium abscessus is increased with norvaline
title_full_unstemmed Efficacy of epetraborole against Mycobacterium abscessus is increased with norvaline
title_short Efficacy of epetraborole against Mycobacterium abscessus is increased with norvaline
title_sort efficacy of epetraborole against mycobacterium abscessus is increased with norvaline
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8535176/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34637487
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1009965
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