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Inicio  /  Antibiotics  /  Vol: 11 Par: 4 (2022)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Neurodegenerative Disease Treatment Drug PBT2 Breaks Intrinsic Polymyxin Resistance in Gram-Positive Bacteria

David M. P. De Oliveira    
Bernhard Keller    
Andrew J. Hayes    
Cheryl-Lynn Y. Ong    
Nichaela Harbison-Price    
Ibrahim M. El-Deeb    
Gen Li    
Nadia Keller    
Lisa Bohlmann    
Stephan Brouwer    
Andrew G. Turner    
Amanda J. Cork    
Thomas R. Jones    
David L. Paterson    
Alastair G. McEwan    
Mark R. Davies    
Christopher A. McDevitt    
Mark von Itzstein and Mark J. Walker    

Resumen

Gram-positive bacteria do not produce lipopolysaccharide as a cell wall component. As such, the polymyxin class of antibiotics, which exert bactericidal activity against Gram-negative pathogens, are ineffective against Gram-positive bacteria. The safe-for-human-use hydroxyquinoline analog ionophore PBT2 has been previously shown to break polymyxin resistance in Gram-negative bacteria, independent of the lipopolysaccharide modification pathways that confer polymyxin resistance. Here, in combination with zinc, PBT2 was shown to break intrinsic polymyxin resistance in Streptococcus pyogenes (Group A Streptococcus; GAS), Staphylococcus aureus (including methicillin-resistant S. aureus), and vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium. Using the globally disseminated M1T1 GAS strain 5448 as a proof of principle model, colistin in the presence of PBT2 + zinc was shown to be bactericidal in activity. Any resistance that did arise imposed a substantial fitness cost. PBT2 + zinc dysregulated GAS metal ion homeostasis, notably decreasing the cellular manganese content. Using a murine model of wound infection, PBT2 in combination with zinc and colistin proved an efficacious treatment against streptococcal skin infection. These findings provide a foundation from which to investigate the utility of PBT2 and next-generation polymyxin antibiotics for the treatment of Gram-positive bacterial infections.

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