Dual action antifungal small molecule modulates multidrug efflux and TOR signaling.
Tanvi Shekhar-GuturjaG M Kamal B GunaherathE M Kithsiri WijeratneJean-Philippe LambertAnna F AveretteSoo Chan LeeTaeyup KimYong-Sun BahnFarida TripodiRon AmmarKatja DöhlKarolina Niewola-StaszkowskaLutz SchmittRobbie J LoewithFrederick P RothDominique SanglardDavid AndesCorey NislowPaola CoccettiAnne-Claude GingrasJoseph HeitmanA A Leslie GunatilakaLeah E CowenPublished in: Nature chemical biology (2016)
There is an urgent need for new strategies to treat invasive fungal infections, which are a leading cause of human mortality. Here, we establish two activities of the natural product beauvericin, which potentiates the activity of the most widely deployed class of antifungal against the leading human fungal pathogens, blocks the emergence of drug resistance, and renders antifungal-resistant pathogens responsive to treatment in mammalian infection models. Harnessing genome sequencing of beauvericin-resistant mutants, affinity purification of a biotinylated beauvericin analog, and biochemical and genetic assays reveals that beauvericin blocks multidrug efflux and inhibits the global regulator TORC1 kinase, thereby activating the protein kinase CK2 and inhibiting the molecular chaperone Hsp90. Substitutions in the multidrug transporter Pdr5 that enable beauvericin efflux impair antifungal efflux, thereby impeding resistance to the drug combination. Thus, dual targeting of multidrug efflux and TOR signaling provides a powerful, broadly effective therapeutic strategy for treating fungal infectious disease that evades resistance.
Keyphrases
- candida albicans
- protein kinase
- drug resistant
- small molecule
- endothelial cells
- infectious diseases
- heat shock protein
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- pluripotent stem cells
- gram negative
- genome wide
- heat shock
- cardiovascular events
- multidrug resistant
- machine learning
- high throughput
- cardiovascular disease
- risk factors
- protein protein
- gene expression
- tyrosine kinase
- single cell
- oxidative stress
- deep learning