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A nutrient-limited screen unmasks rifabutin hyperactivity for extensively drug-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii.

Brian M LunaVincent TreboscBosul LeeMalina BakowskiAmber UlhaqJun YanPeggy LuJiaqi ChengTravis B NielsenJuhyeon LimWarisa KetphanHyungjin EohCase McNamaraNicholas SkandalisRosemary SheChristian KemmerSergio LociuroGlenn E DaleBrad Spellberg
Published in: Nature microbiology (2020)
Industry screens of large chemical libraries have traditionally relied on rich media to ensure rapid bacterial growth in high-throughput testing. We used eukaryotic, nutrient-limited growth media in a compound screen that unmasked a previously unknown hyperactivity of the old antibiotic, rifabutin (RBT), against highly resistant Acinetobacter baumannii. In nutrient-limited, but not rich, media, RBT was 200-fold more potent than rifampin. RBT was also substantially more effective in vivo. The mechanism of enhanced efficacy was a Trojan horse-like import of RBT, but not rifampin, through fhuE, only in nutrient-limited conditions. These results are of fundamental importance to efforts to discover antibacterial agents.
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