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Extreme Drug Tolerance of "Persisters"

Overview
Journal Front Microbiol
Specialty Microbiology
Date 2020 Mar 21
PMID 32194537
Citations 35
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Abstract

Persistence of infection despite extensive chemotherapy with antibiotics displaying low MICs is a hallmark of lung disease caused by (Mab). Thus, the classical MIC assay is a poor predictor of clinical outcome. Discovery of more efficacious antibiotics requires more predictive potency assays. As a mycobacterium, Mab is an obligate aerobe and a chemo-organo-heterotroph - it requires oxygen and organic carbon sources for growth. However, bacteria growing in patients can encounter micro-environmental conditions that are different from aerated nutrient-rich broth used to grow planktonic cultures for MIC assays. These conditions may include oxygen and nutrient limitation which should arrest growth. Furthermore, Mab was shown to grow as biofilms . Here, we show Mab Bamboo, a clinical isolate we use for Mab drug discovery, can survive oxygen deprivation and nutrient starvation for extended periods of time in non-replicating states and developed an model where the bacterium grows as biofilm. Using these culture models, we show that non-replicating or biofilm-growing bacteria display tolerance to clinically used anti-Mab antibiotics, consistent with the observed persistence of infection in patients. To demonstrate the utility of the developed "persister" assays for drug discovery, we determined the effect of novel agents targeting membrane functions against these physiological forms of the bacterium and find that these compounds show "anti-persister" activity. In conclusion, we developed "persister" assays to fill an assay gap in Mab drug discovery compound progression and to enable identification of novel lead compounds showing "anti-persister" activity.

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