AI Article Synopsis

  • * This study explored the relationship between Mtb's carbon metabolism and drug interactions by using gene knockdown mutants to analyze the effects of common antitubercular drugs, revealing that the bacterial metabolic state significantly influences drug efficacy.
  • * The researchers identified ways to enhance rifampicin effectiveness when Mtb grows on cholesterol, providing insights that could help improve drug combinations and understanding of how laboratory results relate to real-world infection scenarios.

Article Abstract

Current chemotherapy against Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), an important human pathogen, requires a multidrug regimen lasting several months. While efforts have been made to optimize therapy by exploiting drug–drug synergies, testing new drug combinations in relevant host environments remains arduous. In particular, host environments profoundly affect the bacterial metabolic state and drug efficacy, limiting the accuracy of predictions based on in vitro assays alone. In this study, we utilized conditional Mtb knockdown mutants of essential genes as an experimentally tractable surrogate for drug treatment and probe the relationship between Mtb carbon metabolism and chemical–genetic interactions (CGIs). We examined the antitubercular drugs isoniazid, rifampicin, and moxifloxacin and found that CGIs are differentially responsive to the metabolic state, defining both environment-independent and -dependent interactions. Specifically, growth on the in vivo–relevant carbon source, cholesterol, reduced rifampicin efficacy by altering mycobacterial cell surface lipid composition. We report that a variety of perturbations in cell wall synthesis pathways restore rifampicin efficacy during growth on cholesterol, and that both environment-independent and cholesterol-dependent in vitro CGIs could be leveraged to enhance bacterial clearance in the mouse infection model. Our findings present an atlas of chemical–genetic–environmental interactions that can be used to optimize drug–drug interactions, as well as provide a framework for understanding in vitro correlates of in vivo efficacy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9169745PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2201632119DOI Listing

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