Spectinamide MBX-4888A exhibits favorable lesion and tissue distribution and promotes treatment shortening in advanced murine models of tuberculosis.
Allison A BaumanJansy P SarathyFirat KayaLisa M MassoudiMichael S SchermanCourtney HastingsJiuyu LiuMin XieElizabeth J BrooksMichelle E RameyIsabelle L JonesNoalani D BenedictMadelyn R MaclaughlinJake A Miller-DawsonSamanthi L WaidyarachchiMichelle M ButlerTerry L BowlinMatthew D ZimmermanAnne J LenaertsBernd MeibohmMercedes Gonzalez-JuarreroMichael A LyonsVéronique DartoisRichard E LeeGregory Thomas RobertsonPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
The spectinamides are novel, narrow-spectrum semisynthetic analogs of spectinomycin, modified to avoid intrinsic efflux by Mycobacterium tuberculosis . Spectinamides, including lead MBX-4888A (Lee-1810), exhibit promising therapeutic profiles in mice, as single drugs and as partner agents with other anti-tuberculosis antibiotics including rifampin and/or pyrazinamide. To demonstrate that this translates to more effective cure, we first confirmed the role of rifampin, with or without pyrazinamide, as essential to achieve effective bactericidal responses and sterilizing cure in the current standard of care regimen in chronically infected C3HeB/FeJ mice compared to BALB/c mice. Thus, demonstrating added value in testing clinically relevant regimens in murine models of increasing pathologic complexity. Next we show that MBX-4888A, given by injection with the front-line standard of care regimen, is treatment shortening in multiple murine tuberculosis infection models. The positive treatment responses to MBX-4888A combination therapy in multiple mouse models including mice exhibiting advanced pulmonary disease can be attributed to favorable distribution in tissues and lesions, retention in caseum, along with favorable effects with rifampin and pyrazinamide under conditions achieved in necrotic lesions. This study also provides an additional data point regarding the safety and tolerability of spectinamide MBX-4888A in long-term murine efficacy studies.
Keyphrases
- mycobacterium tuberculosis
- combination therapy
- healthcare
- high fat diet induced
- pulmonary tuberculosis
- palliative care
- emergency department
- squamous cell carcinoma
- randomized controlled trial
- gene expression
- mouse model
- pulmonary hypertension
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- radiation therapy
- adipose tissue
- metabolic syndrome
- molecular docking
- ultrasound guided
- skeletal muscle
- type diabetes
- big data
- pain management
- open label
- artificial intelligence
- human immunodeficiency virus
- chronic pain
- hepatitis c virus
- quality improvement
- study protocol
- replacement therapy
- electronic health record
- molecular dynamics simulations
- men who have sex with men
- hiv testing
- affordable care act