Pharmacokinetics, tissue distribution, bioavailability and excretion of the anti-virulence drug Fluorothiazinon in rats and rabbits.
Mark V SavitskiiNatalia E MoskalevaAlex BritoPavel A MarkinNailya A ZigangirovaAnna V SolovevaAnna B SheremetNataliya E BondarevaNadezhda L LubenecFranco TagliaroVadim V TarasovKristina A TatzhikovaSvetlana A AppolonovaPublished in: The Journal of antibiotics (2024)
Growing antimicrobial resistance has accelerated the development of anti-virulence drugs to suppress bacterial toxicity without affecting cell viability. Fluorothiazinon (FT), an anti-virulence, type three secretion system and flagella motility inhibitor which has shown promise to suppress drug-resistant pathogens having the potential to enhance the efficacy of commonly prescribed antibiotics when used in combination. In this study we characterized the pharmacokinetics, tissue distribution, bioavailability and excretion of FT in rats and rabbits. FT presented a dose-proportional linear increase in the blood of rats. Tissue distribution profiling confirmed that FT distributes to all organs being substantially higher than in the blood of rats. The bioavailability of FT was higher when administered with starch than with water implying FT should be ideally dosed with food. FT was primarily excreted in the feces in rats and rabbits while negligible amounts are recovered from the urine.