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Lysocin E Targeting Menaquinone in the Membrane of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Is a Promising Lead Compound for Antituberculosis Drugs.

Geberemichal GeberetsadikAkane InaizumiAkihito NishiyamaTakehiro YamaguchiHiroshi HamamotoSuresh PantheeAki TamaruManabu HayatsuYusuke MizutaniShaban Amina KabosoMariko HakamataAleksandr IlinovYuriko OzekiYoshitaka TateishiKazuhisa SekimizuSohkichi Matsumoto
Published in: Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy (2022)
Tuberculosis remains a public health crisis and a health security threat. There is an urgent need to develop new antituberculosis drugs with novel modes of action to cure drug-resistant tuberculosis and shorten the chemotherapy period by sterilizing tissues infected with dormant bacteria. Lysocin E is an antibiotic that showed antibacterial activity against Staphylococcus aureus by binding to its menaquinone (commonly known as vitamin K 2 ). Unlike S. aureus, menaquinone is essential in both growing and dormant Mycobacterium tuberculosis. This study aims to evaluate the antituberculosis activities of lysocin E and decipher its mode of action. We show that lysocin E has high in vitro activity against both drug-susceptible and drug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis var. tuberculosis and dormant mycobacteria. Lysocin E is likely bound to menaquinone, causing M. tuberculosis membrane disruption, inhibition of oxygen consumption, and ATP synthesis. Thus, we have concluded that the high antituberculosis activity of lysocin E is attributable to its synergistic effects of membrane disruption and respiratory inhibition. The efficacy of lysocin E against intracellular M. tuberculosis in macrophages was lower than its potent activity against M. tuberculosis in culture medium, probably due to its low ability to penetrate cells, but its efficacy in mice was still superior to that of streptomycin. Our findings indicate that lysocin E is a promising lead compound for the development of a new tuberculosis drug that cures drug-resistant and latent tuberculosis in a shorter period.
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