Login / Signup

The heme oxygenase-1 metalloporphyrin inhibitor stannsoporfin enhances the bactericidal activity of a novel regimen for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis in a murine model.

Jennie Ruelas CastilloPranita NeupaneStyliani KaranikaStefanie KrugDarla QuijadaAndrew GarciaSamuel AyehDiego L CostaAlan SherNader FotouhiNatalya SerbinaPetros C Karakousis
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
Multidrug-resistant (MDR) Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) poses significant challenges to global tuberculosis (TB) control. Host-directed therapies (HDT) offer a novel approach for TB treatment by enhancing immune-mediated clearance of Mtb. Prior preclinical studies found that inhibition of heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1), an enzyme involved in heme metabolism, with tin-protoporphyrin IX (SnPP) significantly reduced mouse lung bacillary burden alone and when co-administered with the first-line antitubercular regimen. Here we evaluated the adjunctive HDT activity of a novel HO-1 inhibitor, stannsoporfin (SnMP), in combination with a novel MDR-TB regimen containing human-equivalent doses comprising a next-generation diarylquinoline, TBAJ-876 (S), pretomanid (Pa), and a new oxazolidinone, TBI-223 (O) (collectively, SPaO) in Mtb-infected BALB/c mice. After 4 weeks of treatment, SPaO + SnMP 5 mg/kg reduced mean lung bacillary burden by an additional 0.69 log 10 (P=0.0145) relative to SPaO alone. As early as two weeks post-treatment initiation, SnMP adjunctive therapy differentially altered the expression of pro-inflammatory cytokine genes, and CD38, a marker of M1 macrophages. Next, we evaluated the sterilizing potential of SnMP adjunctive therapy in a BALB/c relapse model. After six weeks of treatment, SPaO + SnMP 10 mg/kg reduced lung bacterial burdens to 0.71 ± 0.23 log 10 CFU, a 0.78 log-fold greater decrease in lung CFU compared to SpaO alone. Although adjunctive SnMP did not reduce microbiological relapse rates after 6 weeks of treatment, mice receiving this regimen exhibited the lowest lung CFU upon relapse. SnMP is a promising HDT candidate requiring further study in combination with regimens for drug-resistant TB.
Keyphrases