Pyrvinium pamoate potentiates levofloxacin against levofloxacin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus .
Grace KaulUttam B KaraleAbdul AkhirManjulika ShuklaDeepanshi SaxenaHaridas B RodeSidharth ChopraPublished in: Future microbiology (2022)
Background: Drug repurposing is a viable approach to expediting the tedious conventional drug discovery process, given rapidly increasing bacterial resistance. In this context, we have repurposed pyrvinium pamoate (PP) for its antibacterial activity against Staphylococcus aureus . Methods: US FDA-approved non-antibiotics were screened against clinically relevant bacterial pathogens to identify antibacterials. The hits were further evaluated utilizing a variety of preclinical parameters, following which in vivo efficacy was estimated in isolation and in combination in a murine neutropenic thigh infection model. Result: The screening identified PP exhibiting potent activity against S. aureus along with concentration-dependent killing. PP also showed a post-antibiotic effect of >22 h and significantly eradicated preformed S. aureus biofilms and intracellular S. aureus at 1× and 5× MIC, respectively. PP synergized with levofloxacin both in vitro and in vivo , resulting in ∼1.5 and ∼0.5 log 10 CFU/g reduction against susceptible and resistant S. aureus infections, respectively, as compared with untreated control. Conclusion: Pyrvinium potentiates levofloxacin against levofloxacin-resistant S. aureus.