Literature DB >> 26157437

High-dose rifampicin kills persisters, shortens treatment duration, and reduces relapse rate in vitro and in vivo.

Yanmin Hu1, Alexander Liu2, Fatima Ortega-Muro3, Laura Alameda-Martin3, Denis Mitchison1, Anthony Coates1.   

Abstract

Although high-dose rifampicin holds promise for improving tuberculosis control by potentially shortening treatment duration, these effects attributed to eradication of persistent bacteria are unclear. The presence of persistent Mycobacterium tuberculosis was examined using resuscitation promoting factors (RPFs) in both in vitro hypoxia and in vivo murine tuberculosis models before and after treatment with incremental doses of rifampicin. Pharmacokinetic parameters and dose-dependent profile of rifampicin in the murine model were determined. The Cornell mouse model was used to test efficacy of high-dose rifampicin in combination with isoniazid and pyrazinamide and to measure relapse rate. There were large numbers of RPF-dependent persisters in vitro and in vivo. Stationary phase cultures were tolerant to rifampicin while higher concentrations of rifampicin eradicated plate count positive but not RPF-dependent persistent bacteria. In murine infection model, incremental doses of rifampicin exhibited a dose-dependent eradication of RPF-dependent persisters. Increasing the dose of rifampicin significantly reduced the risk of antibiotic resistance emergence. In Cornell model, mice treated with high-dose rifampicin regimen resulted in faster visceral clearance; organs were M. tuberculosis free 8 weeks post-treatment compared to 14 weeks with standard-dose rifampicin regimen. Organ sterility, plate count and RPF-dependent persister negative, was achieved. There was no disease relapse compared to the standard dose regimen (87.5%). High-dose rifampicin therapy results in eradication of RPF-dependent persisters, allowing shorter treatment duration without disease relapse. Optimizing rifampicin to its maximal efficacy with acceptable side-effect profiles will provide valuable information in human studies and can potentially improve current tuberculosis chemotherapy.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Mycobacterium tuberculosis; mouse model; persistence; resuscitation promoting factors; rifampicin

Year:  2015        PMID: 26157437      PMCID: PMC4477163          DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2015.00641

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Front Microbiol        ISSN: 1664-302X            Impact factor:   5.640


Introduction

Tuberculosis remains a major cause of mortality worldwide (World Health Organization [WHO], 2010). Effective disease control is hindered by bacterial persistence, which necessitates prolonged multi-agent antimicrobial therapy; leading to poor patient compliance, high relapse rates and drug-resistance (Mitchison, 2005). Thus, shortening the duration of chemotherapy is of significant clinical benefit. Drug discovery, although exciting, is arduous, expensive, and time-consuming (Nunn et al., 2008; van Niekerk and Ginsberg, 2009). Therefore, increasing the therapeutic dose of currently marketed antibiotics represents an innovative concept. Of the current anti-tuberculous drugs, only rifampicin is effective against persistent Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mitchison, 1985; Hu et al., 2000; Mitchison, 2000; Mitchison and Fourie, 2010) and has favorable toxicity profile to be used at higher doses (Girling, 1978; Yew and Leung, 2006). Previous studies showed that high-dose rifampicin therapy up to 35 mg/kg is well-tolerated in man (Kreis et al., 1976; Diacon et al., 2007; Boeree et al., 2013) and increases the rate of tuberculosis clearance (Kreis et al., 1976). Similar observations were made in mice (Jayaram et al., 2003; Rosenthal et al., 2012; de Steenwinkel et al., 2013), with a maximum tolerable dose of 160 mg/kg per day (de Steenwinkel et al., 2013). However, whether these effects are attributed to eradication of persistent bacteria, the fundamental problem preventing effective disease control, is unclear. In this study, we hypothesed that high-dose rifampicin in the current tuberculosis therapy would be [1] effective in eradicating persistent M. tuberculosis and [2] prevent emergence of drug resistance and disease relapse. To this end, we rigorously studied the therapeutic effects of incremental doses of rifampicin singly or in combination with isoniazid and pyrazinamide on both in intro and in vivo models of bacterial persistence.

Materials and Methods

In Vitro Hypoxia Model

M. tuberculosis strain H37Rv was grown in 7H9 medium containing 0.05% Tween 80 supplemented with 10% albumin dextrose complex (ADC; Becton and Dickinson, UK) at 37°C without disturbance for 200 days (Hu et al., 2000). At different time point, CFU counts were performed by plating a serial of 10-folds dilutions of the cultures on 7H11 agar medium supplemented with oleic albumin dextrose complex (OADC, Becton and Dickinson, UK). The 7H11 agar plates were made according to the manufacturer’s instruction. The quality control of the plates for each batch was made by plating a serial 10-folds dilution of a log phase M. tuberculosis culture on the agar plates and compared with the 7H11 agar plates from Becton and Dickinson, UK. Colonies were counted after incubation of the plates at 37°C for 3–4 weeks and viability was expressed as Log CFU/ml. The susceptibility patterns of the strain to anti-TB drugs defined as minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) are listed as following: rifampicin 0.5 mg/L, rifabutin 0.0625 mg/L, rifapentine 0.25 mg/L, isoniazid 0.25 mg/L, ethambutol 2 mg/L, streptomycin 2 mg/L, para-aminosalicylic acid 0.5 mg/L and pyrazinamide > 512 mg/L (pH 5.5–5.6).

Antibiotic Exposure In Vitro

Rifampicin (Sanofi Aventis) at different concentrations was added into log-phase and stationary-phase cultures in the hypoxia model and incubated at 37°C. At different time point, the cultures were washed with phosphate buffered saline (PBS) for three times and viability was determined using CFU counts or broth counts.

Resuscitation of M. Tuberculosis

For resuscitation of M. tuberculosis grown in vitro and in vivo, culture supernatant containing resuscitation promoting factors (RPFs) or 7H9 medium was used as described previously (Mukamolova et al., 2010). M. tuberculosis H37Rv was grown in 7H9 medium for 15–20 days until an optical density of 1 was reached. The cultures were harvested by centrifugation at 3000 g for 15 min and filtered with 0.2 μm filter (Sartorius) twice. The sterilized culture filtrates were used immediately for the broth counting of the most probable number (MPN) of the bacilli. Broth counting was performed as serial 10-folds dilutions in triplicate in which 0.5 ml of in vitro cultures were added to 4.5 ml of the culture filtrates or 0.3 ml of tissue homogenates to 2.7 ml of the culture filtrates. At 10-days intervals over a 2-months period of incubation at 37°C, the broth cultures were examined for visible turbidity. Growth of M. tuberculosis in turbid tubes was confirmed by colonial morphology on 7H11 agar plates. The MPN of viable bacilli was then estimated from the patterns of positive and negative tubes (Mukamolova et al., 2010). The absence of microorganisms other than mycobacteria from turbid tubes was shown by plating on blood agar medium (Oxoid) and sabouraud dextrose agar (Oxoid).

Pharmacokinetic of Rifampicin in BALB/S Mice

Pharmacokinetic (PK) of rifampicin in non-infected mice was determined by dosing-ranging studies. Rifampicin at 0, 10, 20, 30, 40, and 50 mg/kg body weight was administered orally with a single dose by gavage to three BALB/c mice (6–8 weeks old, female) which were obtained from Harlan UK Ltd. Serial venous blood samples (20 μl) were collected at various time points from 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 24 h post-treatment by tail puncture and mixed with 40 μl of water. The blood samples were stored at -80°C and subsequently transported in dry ice to GlaxoSmithKline for bioanalysis and PK calculations. Three animals were used for the entire blood sampling process. The concentration of rifampicin in the blood was determined by UPLC-MSMS assay. PK analysis was performed with Phoenix WinNonLin software (version 6.3; Pharsight, USA). The PK parameters were calculated using a non-compartmental analysis (NCA) model.

Rifampicin Monotherapy in Mouse Model

Rifampicin was tested with five different doses singly for 12 weeks in BALB/c mice (6–8 weeks old, female). The mice were infected intravenously with 1.2 × 105 CFU of the M. tuberculosis H37Rv which was mouse-passaged to retain the virulence of the strain. Spleens and lungs from four mice were removed rapidly after sacrifice and sterile autopsy performed at timepoint zero. CFU counts of the organs were performed from serial 10-folds dilutions of the homogenate on plates of selective 7H11 medium and incubated at 37°C for 3–4 weeks. At 2 weeks after infection, the mice were treated with 10, 15, 20, 30, and 50 mg/kg of rifampicin 5 days/week for 12 weeks. At 2nd, 4th, 6th, 8th, 10th, and 12th weeks post-treatment, organ CFU counts from four mice from each treatment group were determined. All animal experiments were performed according to the Animals Scientific Procedures Act, 1986 (an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom 1986 c. 14; Home Office Project licence Number 70/7077) with approval from St George’s, University of London ethics committee. The animal husbandry guidelines and animal procedure for this study were followed according to the Animals Scientific Procedures Act, 1986.

Selection of Rifampicin-Resistant Mutants In Vivo

At 8th, 10th, and 12th weeks post-treatment, the lung and spleen homogenates were plated on 7H11 plates containing rifampicin concentration at a serial of twofolds dilution from 0 to 64 mg/L. Colonies from the plates containing MIC value higher than fourfolds were picked and regrown in 7H9 medium. MIC was retested on rifampicin containing 7H11 agar plates.

Cornell Model

For the combination of rifampicin with isoniazid and pyrazinamide, the Cornell mouse model was used as described previously (McCune and Tompsett, 1956; McCune et al., 1966; Hu et al., 2000). Briefly, at 3 weeks after M. tuberculosis H37Rv infection, treatment was given to female BALB/c mice for 14 weeks with 150 mg/kg pyrazinamide, 25 mg/kg isoniazid combined with 10 or 50 mg/kg rifampicin by daily oral administration for 5 days per week. A sample of four mice was sacrificed at the 2nd, 4th, and 6th weeks and a sample of 10 mice was sacrificed 8th, 11th, and 14th weeks of treatment to monitor CFU counts. The organ homogenates from the 14th weeks were cultured in selective Kirchner liquid medium by the addition of polymyxin B 200 U/ml, carbenicillin 100 mg/L, trimethoprim 20 mg/L, and amphotericin B 10 mg/L (Selectatab, Mast Diagnostica GmbH) for 4 weeks with subsequent sub-culturing onto selective Löwenstein-Jensen slopes for a further 4 weeks. Immediately after termination of 14 weeks of chemotherapy, the remaining mice were administered 0.5 mg/mouse of hydrocortisone acetate (McCune et al., 1966) by daily oral administration for 8 weeks to inhibit the host immune response, CFU counts from lungs and spleens were performed from serial 10-folds dilutions of the homogenate and the entire homogenates of the organs were also plated on 7H11 agar plates to determine disease relapse.

Statistical Analysis

The difference between different experimental groups was determined by analysis of variance (ANOVA) and Student’s t-test. The difference between the relapse rates was determined by Chi-square test. P-values < 0.05 were considered significant.

Results

RPF-Supernatant Resuscitates Persistent M. Tuberculosis Growth In Vitro

In the in vitro hypoxic model (Wayne, 1976), exponential growth was observed up to 15 days, followed by growth stabilization until day 60, when a 2-log reduction of CFU counts occurred lasting up to day 200 (Figure ). To determine the cause of this count reduction (cell death or viable but non-culturable state), log-phase and stationary phase culture were incubated with the supernatant of a late log-phase culture containing RPF or 7H9 (Mukamolova et al., 2010). These RPF-supernatant or 7H9 medium resuscitated cultures were quantified using the MPN method. Interestingly, at the time points selected for comparison (14, 35, 45, 60, 70, 80, 120, and 200 days), RPF-supernatant resuscitated cultures displayed progressively higher broth counts than the CFU counts (0.08, 0.23, 0. 30, 0.45, 1.28, 1.51, 1.99, and 2.03 logs, respectively; Figure ) compared to those of cultures resuscitated by 7H9 (-0.08, 0.00, 0.13, 0.15, 0.72, 0.82, 0.99 and 0.96 logs, respectively; Figure ). The 7H9 or RPF-dependent persisters were unable to form colonies during prolonged incubation periods. Significant differences were observed amongst CFU counts, 7H9 broth counts and RPF broth counts (P < 0.001 to 0.0001) determined by ANOVA analysis. Resuscitation of RPF-dependent tubercle bacilli from the M. tuberculosis H37Rv was grown in 7H9 medium without disturbance for 200 days. CFU counts were performed at different time points in triplicate (line with empty squares). MPN counts from cultures of 14, 35, 45, 60, 70, 80, 120, and 200 days were performed with 7H9 medium (line with solid circles) or the culture filtrate (line with solid squares). These experiments were performed three times with reproducible results. ANOVA analysis demonstrated that there were significant differences amongst CFU counts, 7H9 broth counts and RPF broth counts (∗∗∗P < 0.001 to 0.0001).

Higher Concentration of Rifampicin was Required to Treat, but not Eradicate, M. Tuberculosis in Stationary Phase In Vitro

To determine the optimal concentration of rifampicin required to clear stationary-phase bacteria, we examined the effect of incremental drug concentrations on both log- (7 days) and stationary-phase (60 days) cultures; see Figure . In log-phase cultures, apparent bacterial clearance was achieved at/before 20 days with rifampicin concentrations of >2 mg/L (Figure ). However, to achieve the same antimicrobial effect in stationary-phase cultures, significantly higher drug concentrations (>32 mg/L) were required (Figure ). Determination of rifampicin activity against log-phase and stationary-phase Rifampicin at the concentration from 16 to 0 mg/L were incubated with a 7 days log-phase culture (A) and rifampicin at the concentration from 64 to 0 mg/L were incubated with the 60 days stationary-phase culture (B). CFU counts were estimated at different time points. A 100-days culture was treated with 12.5, 25, 50, and 100 mg/L of rifampicin for 5 days. After removal of rifampicin, the treated culture were subject to CFU counting on agar plates and MPN counting with the culture filtrates (C). These experiments were performed three times with reproducible results. Statistical analysis demonstrated that the decline of CFU counts after treatment with different concentrations of rifampicin was significant, P < 0.0008 (ANOVA), for the log-phase culture (A), P < 0.001 (ANOVA) for the stationary phase culture (B) and P < 0.001 (∗∗∗ Student’s t-test) for the 100-days culture (C). To delineate the level of residual viable M. tuberculosis remaining after apparent bacterial clearance with high concentration rifampicin treatment, we incubated 100-days cultures with incremental concentrations of rifampicin (12.5, 25, 50, and 100 mg/L) for 5 days. After resuscitation with RPF-culture filtrate, viable bacteria were salvageable from all cultures and increased with reducing concentrations of rifampicin treatment (Figure ). Importantly, the apparent bacterial clearance produced by a 5-days treatment with 100 mg/L rifampicin showed a 2-log resuscitatable growth count with RPF-culture filtrate (Figure ). This reflects the difficulties in completely eradicating M. tuberculosis, even with extremely high rifampicin concentrations, in vitro.

RPF-Supernatant Resuscitates Persistent M. Tuberculosis Growth In Vivo

We previously showed that M. tuberculosis enters stationary-phase growth after ∼2–3 weeks of infection in mice (Hu et al., 2006). In order to investigate the growth behavior of stationary-phase bacteria in vivo, we incubated murine lung homogenates from 2, 6, 11, 12, and 14 weeks of M. tuberculosis infection with 7H9 medium or RPF-culture filtrate and determined the bacilli MPN. As illustrated in Figure , 7H9 medium resuscitated cultures showed higher broth counts than the CFU counts from mouse lungs (0.26, 0.45, 0.65, 0.68, and 1.00 logs, respectively). In contrast, RPF-supernatant resuscitated cultures displayed progressively higher broth counts than the CFU counts from the organ (0.81, 1.24, 1.58, 1.69, and 2.00 logs, respectively). This is the first selective demonstration of viable RPF-dependent bacilli in murine tuberculosis infection. There were significant differences amongst CFU counts, 7H9 broth counts and RPF broth counts (P < 0.001) in mice determined by ANOVA analysis. Resuscitation of BALB/c mice were infected with M. tuberculosis. Viability of the bacilli in lung was determined by CFU counting and MPN counting with 7H9 or the culture filtrates at 2, 6, 10, 12, and 14 weeks post-infection. The results have been performed twice with reproducible results. ANOVA analysis demonstrated that there were significant differences amongst CFU counts, 7H9 broth counts and RPF broth counts (∗∗∗P < 0.001) in mice.

Pharmacokinetic of Rifampicin

Rifampicin plasma concentration time curves examined over a period of 24 h in BALB/c mice (Table ) indicated a dose-proportional increase in maximal concentration of rifampicin (Cmax) and drug exposure (AUC; Table ). This implies the free (protein unbound) fraction of rifampicin in plasma. Interestingly, Tmax was shortened with the increased dosage of the drug. Blood pharmacokinetics parameters of rifampicin in BALB/c mice.

Effect of High-Dose Rifampicin In Vivo

We investigated the effect of rifampicin dose increments on the rate of bacterial eradication and emergence of drug resistance. At 10 mg/kg, the rate of pulmonary bacterial eradication was slow (99% kill at 8 weeks followed by a plateau). Treatment with 15 mg/kg doubled the rate of bacterial eradication (99% kill at 4 weeks). Both doses failed to achieve undetectable M. tuberculosis CFU counts in murine lungs after 12 weeks treatment. Undetectable CFU counts in lungs were achieved with 20, 30, and 50 mg/kg of rifampicin treatment for 12, 10, and 6 weeks, respectively (Figure ). A similar dose response trend was observed in spleen (Figure ). No outward signs of toxicity or abnormal behavior were observed in any mice treated with rifampicin. Viability of The results of a single experiment are shown with viability expressed as log CFU counts per lung (A) and spleen (B). Mice were infected intravenously and the infection was allowed to progress for 2 weeks prior to treatment with rifampicin at 10, 15, 20, 30 and 50 mg/kg indicated as a solid arrow for 12 weeks (time weeks 0–12). At week 2, 4, 6, 8, and 12 of post-treatment, four mice from each group were sacrificed for CFU counting. Data of the mice containing rifampicin-resistant strains for the 10 mg/kg group was excluded. ANOVA analysis demonstrated that the decline of CFU counts after treatment with different concentrations of rifampicin was significant in lungs P < 0.02 and in spleens P < 0.04. No rifampicin-resistant strains were detected for the 15, 20, 30, and 50 mg/kg treatment groups. The isolates were susceptible to rifampicin with a MIC at 0.5 mg/L. However, for the 10 mg/kg group, at 8 weeks of treatment, rifampicin resistant strains were isolated from spleen of one out of four mice showing MIC at 2 mg/L. At 10 and 12 weeks, resistant strains were found from lung or spleen of two out of four mice showing MIC at 4–8 mg/L. These data were excluded from Figure . To investigate the effects of increased dosage of rifampicin (10–50 mg/kg) on the post-treatment levels of persisters through RPF-induced resuscitation, we incubated lung and spleen homogenies at 6 and 12 weeks of antibiotic treatment with the culture filtrates. At 6 weeks post-treatment, only 50 mg/kg of rifampicin rendered lung CFU counts to zero, but 0.56 logs of RPF-resuscitable bacilli remained (Table ). At 12 weeks post-treatment, incremental doses of rifampicin at 20, 30, and 50 mg/kg resulted in more effective elimination of RPF-dependent bacilli (1.33, 0.96, and <0.01 log cells/lung, 1.27, 1.09, and 0.5 log cells/spleen, respectively) after CFU counts in these organs were rendered negative (Table ). Importantly, pulmonary sterility was observed after 12 weeks of high-dose rifampicin (50 mg/kg) treatment. Resuscitation of M. tuberculosis H37Rv in mouse lungs and spleens after treatment with different concentration of rifampicin.

High-Dose of Rifampicin in the Cornell Model

We compared the efficacy of high-dose (50 mg/kg) vs. low-dose (10 mg/kg) rifampicin in combination regimens with fixed standard doses of isoniazid (25 mg/kg) and pyrazinamide (150 mg/kg) in a well-defined tuberculosis model – the Cornell model. In terms of lung CFU counts, a 99% bacterial eradication (2-log reduction) was achieved more rapidly after treatment with high-dose (2 weeks) compared to low-dose (3.4 weeks) combination regimens. To achieve negative CFU counts in lungs, a longer period of treatment was required for the low-dose (14 weeks) compared to high-dose (8 weeks) regimen. This is shown in Figure . In the sterile organs, no tubercle bacilli were recovered as confirmed by negative cultures of the organ homogenates in selective Kirchner broth for 4 weeks. Similar treatment profiles were seen in spleens (Figure ) except CFU count negativity was achieved slightly earlier in the high-dose treated group (6 weeks) compared to in lungs. Viability of The results of a single experiment are shown with viability expressed as log CFU counts per lung (A) and spleen (B). Mice were infected intravenously at week –3 and the infection was allowed to progress for 3 weeks prior to treatment with isoniazid and pyrazinamide with rifampicin added at 10 or 50 mg/kg indicated as a solid arrow for 14 weeks (time weeks 0–14). At week 2, 4, 6, 8, 11, and 14 of post-treatment, CFU counts in the organs from each group were estimated. Steroid treatment was started immediately after the termination of 14 weeks of antibiotic treatment as indicated with an empty arrow. The experiment has been performed twice with reproducible results. Statistical analysis demonstrated that the decline of CFU counts in lungs and spleens was significant between low and high-dose rifampicin regiments, ∗∗∗P < 0.0001 or ∗∗P < 0.02 (Student’s t-test). In order to investigate the effect of high-dose vs. low-dose regimens on the post-treatment level of persisters through RPF-induced resuscitation, lung homogenates at 8 and 14 weeks post-treatment were incubated with supernatants containing RPFs. At 8 weeks of treatment with the low-dose regimen, high levels of both bacterial CFU counts (2.32-logs in lungs; 1.99-logs in spleen) and RPF-resuscitated bacilli (3.88-log cells in lungs; 3.71-log cells in spleen) remained. At 14 weeks post-treatment, although CFU counts were negative, there were significant levels of RPF-resuscitated bacilli in lungs and spleens (1.41-log cells in lungs; 1.61-log cells in spleen). Treatment with high-dose regimen at both 8 and 14 weeks led to complete eradication of bacterial CFU counts. RPF-resuscitated bacilli (0.8-log) were only detectable in spleens at 8 weeks post-treatment. This effect is shown in Table . Resuscitation of M. tuberculosis H37Rv in mouse lungs and spleens of Cornell model after treatment with the 10 and 50 mg/kg rifampicin regimens.

Relapse Rate after Treatment with the Regimens Containing Different Doses of Rifampicin in the Cornell Model

After 8 weeks of high dosage steroid immunosuppression which reactivated latent TB (McCune et al., 1966), disease relapse rates for the two dose rifampicin regimen treatments were determined by the percentage of mice that developed positive M. tuberculosis cultures in lungs, spleens or both. The organ CFU counts are shown in Table . The treatment with the regimen containing 10 mg/kg of rifampicin gave rise to M. tuberculosis positive organs in 21 out of 24 mice (87.5% relapse rate). In contrast, treatment with the regimen containing high-dose of rifampicin at 50 mg/kg resulted in zero counts in the organs showing relapse free (P < 0.001). Organ CFU counts after 8 weeks of steroid treatment.

Discussion

A persister-eradicating drug regimen with a short duration of therapy would represent the most important advantage in tuberculosis treatment. To our knowledge, this study is the first to demonstrate, in the Cornell model, that combination therapy containing high-dose rifampicin (50 mg/kg) eradicates persistent bacilli, shortens treatment duration and reduces disease relapse. Furthermore, high-dose rifampicin treatment reduces the emergence of antibiotic resistance. In vitro, M. tuberculosis persistence is driven by hypoxia (Wayne, 1994). In the in vitro stationary-phase model (Wayne, 1976, 1977; Hu et al., 2000), the bacilli grow initially in the top layer of an unagitated culture, where oxygen is available. They slowly adapt to microaerophilic and eventually to anaerobic conditions while sinking down in the medium and finally settling on the bottom of the containers (Hu et al., 1999). At 30–40 days, replication cannot be detected (Wayne, 1976, 1977). In late stationary-phase cultures after 60 days of incubation, protein synthesis is switched off (Hu et al., 1998). Interestingly, the data shown in the present paper indicates that the majority of bacilli entered into a viable but non-culturable stage (plate count negative), some of which was detected using 7H9 broth. However, a subpopulation of persistent M. tuberculosis was only resuscitated using the supernatant from actively growing cultures containing RPF (Figure ). It has been shown that RPFs are bacterial self-generated stimulating proteins (Mukamolova et al., 1998) which not only facilitate the growth of young cultures but wake up dormant cells in vitro (Shleeva et al., 2002) and in TB patients’ sputa (Mukamolova et al., 2010). We conclude that the decline in CFU counts after 60 days of incubation (Figure ) was not due to bacterial death, because the total viable cells (CFU counts and broth counts detected by RPF) remained constant (Figure ). In a murine infection model (Hu et al., 2006; Hu and Coates, 2009), it has been shown that the animal’s immune response restricts bacterial growth after 2–3 weeks of infection but fails to eliminate the infection driving the bacteria into an in vivo stationary phase. It has been reported that during chronic infection in mice, M. tuberculosis replicates and dies leading to a dynamic balanced growth (Gill et al., 2009). Our results showed that considerable amounts of bacilli, at least 15-folds more than CFU count positive bacteria, converted into RPF dependent and plate count negative persisters (Figure ). 7H9 medium only resuscitated fivefolds of the plate count negative persisters. Our data confirmed that traditional viable counting methods greatly underestimate the actual numbers of viable cells. We previously demonstrated, by mRNA detection using reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction and [3H]uridine incorporation, that ongoing transcription continues in persistent M. tuberculosis in the sterile organs of the Cornell model (Hu et al., 2000). These results indicate that the persistent bacilli were metabolically active. It is not known if the persistent organisms we detected previously were the same as the RPF dependent persisters. These persistent bacteria contribute a major problem to the development of effective and shortened chemotherapy. In vitro, stationary-phase cultures are profoundly tolerant to rifampicin. A 16-folds higher concentration of rifampicin (32 mg/L) was required to eradicate CFU count positive organisms compared to log phase bacteria (2 mg/L; Figure ). Importantly, RPF dependent persisters in 100 days stationary-phase cultures could not be eliminated with even ultra-high concentrations of rifampicin (100 mg/L; Figure ). In mice, while increased doses of rifampicin alone after prolonged treatment were able to achieve organ CFU count negativity and reduced RPF-dependent bacteria; only high-dose of rifampicin (50 mg/kg) was able to eradicate the persisters in lungs (Table ). Furthermore, we have shown here that in the Cornell model, high-dose rifampicin regimen eliminates all persisters, even the RPF dependent subpopulation (Table ). It has been found that in human tuberculosis prior to treatment, smear-positive sputa contained a considerable amount of RPF dependent persisters (Mukamolova et al., 2010). Furthermore, the numbers of RPF-dependent persisters was enhanced after standard chemotherapy compared with the plate counts positive populations (Mukamolova et al., 2010). It is not known whether the persisters we found in vitro and in vivo were the same as those in humans and if rifampicin treatment in mice necessarily predicts the situation with rifampicin in humans. We have recently highlighted (Coates et al., 2013) contradictory results with high-dosage rifamycin in mice and humans. Tuberculosis infections are different between mice and man, not least the absence of caseating granulomas in mice. Therefore, the interpretation of our data and the subsequent translation into human studies need to be undertaken with caution. It has been proposed recently (Mitchison, 2012) that peak drug concentrations are better indicators than AUC for predicting higher degrees of persister-eradication and lower relapse rates. This is based on TB patients (rapid or slow acetylators) treated with isoniazid in whom the magnitude of clinical response was related to peak concentration of the drug (Mitchison, 2012). Repeated peaks can kill low-level resistant mutants. The same may be true for rifampicin (Mitchison, 2012) because repeated peak concentrations of rifamycins kill low antibiotic-tolerant persisters (Hu et al., 2000; Mitchison, 2012). Our results show that the PK value at 10 mg/kg gave a Cmax in blood of 11 mg/L and an AUC0-24 h of 121 mg h/L which was very similar to those of previous studies in mice (Rosenthal et al., 2012; de Steenwinkel et al., 2013) and in humans (Doble et al., 1988; Sirgel et al., 2005). The PK values of rifampicin increased proportionally with increasing doses of rifampicin which was also in agreement with previous murine study (Rosenthal et al., 2012; de Steenwinkel et al., 2013). Although standard doses of rifampicin achieved a blood level of 11 mg/L, only 3.3% of free drug (de Steenwinkel et al., 2013) was able to diffuse to the lesion and inhibit bacterial growth as 97–98% of rifampicin or rifapentine was bound to plasma protein (Mitchison, 1998; de Steenwinkel et al., 2013). This suggests that a standard dose of rifampicin is not high enough to kill persistent organisms which are present at the beginning of the treatment and formed during the antibiotic treatment. In the murine model, we showed here that increasing dose of rifampicin exhibited an accelerated dose-dependent eradication of persistent bacteria (Table ). When the rifampicin concentration was increased to 30 mg/kg or higher, high blood Cmax was achieved, leading to a higher level of biological available rifampicin which was able to remove persistent bacteria (Mitchison, 2012). We showed rifampicin resistance appeared after 8 weeks of standard rifampicin treatment (10 mg/kg) in mice which was exacerbated by increasing the duration of therapy. This concurs with previous evidence that prolonged anti-TB drug exposure and higher bacterial burdens predict the emergence of antibiotic resistance (de Steenwinkel et al., 2010). In certain countries, standard anti-TB drug regimens rendered a low 2-months sputum culture conversion rate (between 50 and 70%) which led to acquired drug resistance (Abdool Karim et al., 2010; Calver et al., 2010). The development of rifampicin resistance was strongly associated with lower serum drug concentrations (Pasipanodya et al., 2013), while higher Cmax and AUC inhibited rifampicin resistance (Gumbo et al., 2007). Importantly, we show here that higher doses of rifampicin (>15 mg/kg) induced rapid bacterial eradication with undetectable resistant bacilli. Increasing the dose of rifampicin significantly reduced the risk of antibiotic resistance emergence. The precise reason for this mechanism is unclear; we speculate it relates to the fact that dead, and possibly, metabolically inhibited bacteria are unable to mutate. We present unprecedented evidence that true TB-sterility, i.e., negative CFU count and RPF-resuscitatable cultures, can be achieved in lungs and spleens after 8 and 14 weeks of combination chemotherapy containing high-dose rifampicin (50 mg/kg). For the first time, we offer a possible mechanistic insight into this observation. This builds significantly on existing evidence that suggests that high-dose rifampicin shortens treatment duration from 14 to 8 weeks (Rosenthal et al., 2012; de Steenwinkel et al., 2013). Our findings show that RPF-dependent bacilli constitute a major pool for disease relapse in the mouse Cornell model, not only the culturable but also the non-culturable bacilli are eradicated, the treatment period is shortened and disease relapse rate is reduced.

Conclusion

We demonstrated that RPF-dependent persistent M. tuberculosis was formed in vitro and in vivo. The current recommended dosage of 10 mg/kg is insufficient to kill persistent bacilli. Higher doses of rifampicin alone or in combination with isoniazid and pyrazinamide significantly shortened the treatment period and eliminated disease relapse by removing persistent bacteria. Optimizing rifampicin to its maximal therapeutic efficacy with acceptable side-effect profiles will provide valuable information in human studies and can potentially improve current tuberculosis chemotherapy.

Conflict of Interest Statement

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
Table 1

Blood pharmacokinetics parameters of rifampicin in BALB/c mice.

Dose (mg/kg)Cmax (mg/L)Tmax (h)AUC0-24 h (mgh/L)AUCinf (mgh/L)
1011 ± 22.7121 ± 10162 ± 29
2021 ± 12.3228 ± 28259 ± 36
3032 ± 22332 ± 31370 ± 43
4048 ± 41.7530 ± 33598 ± 58
5052 ± 101600 ± 81739 ± 72
Table 2

Resuscitation of M. tuberculosis H37Rv in mouse lungs and spleens after treatment with different concentration of rifampicin.

Lung
Spleen
Treatment (mg/kg)WeeksPlate counts (log CFU/lung)Broth counts RPF (log cells/lung)Plate counts (log CFU/spleen)Broth counts RPF (log cells/spleen)
1065.75 ± 0.117.49 ± 0.515.63 ± 0.297.36 ± 0.20
1564.55 ± 0.145.97 ± 0.124.06 ± 0.135.28 ± 0.07
2063.93 ± 0.095.02 ± 0.043.46 ± 0.194.53 ± 0.60
3063.11 ± 0.394.09 ± 0.203.06 ± 0.584.06 ± 0.24
50600.56 ± 0.230.38 ± 1.060.99 ± 0.45
10124.98 ± 0.046.92 ± 0.225.03 ± 0.036.58 ± 0.50
15122.41 ± 0.393.89 ± 0.232.09 ± 0.103.40 ± 0.40
201201.33 ± 0.0401.27 ± 0.98
301200.96 ± 0.4001.09 ± 0.47
50120<0.0100.50 ± 0.05
Table 3

Resuscitation of M. tuberculosis H37Rv in mouse lungs and spleens of Cornell model after treatment with the 10 and 50 mg/kg rifampicin regimens.

Lung
Spleen
Treatment groupWeeksPlate counts (log CFU/lung)Broth counts RPF (log cells/lung)Plate counts (log CFU/spleen)Broth counts RPF (log cells/spleen)
R10HZ82.32 ± 0.243.88 ± 0.391.99 ± 0.073.71 ± 0.37
1401.41 ± 0.1201.61 ± 0.29
R50HZ80<0.0100.80 ± 0.36
140<0.010<0.01
Table 4

Organ CFU counts after 8 weeks of steroid treatment.

Positive culture fromR10HZR50HZ
Spleen only110
Lung only50
Both organs50
Neither organs328
Total2428
Relapse (%)87.50
  38 in total

1.  Two three-month treatment regimens for pulmonary tuberculosis.

Authors:  B Kreis; S Pretet; J Birenbaum; P Guibout; J J Hazeman; E Orin; S Perdrizet; J Weil
Journal:  Bull Int Union Tuberc       Date:  1976

Review 2.  The near future: improving the activity of rifamycins and pyrazinamide.

Authors:  D A Mitchison; P B Fourie
Journal:  Tuberculosis (Edinb)       Date:  2010-04-09       Impact factor: 3.131

3.  The early bactericidal activities of rifampin and rifapentine in pulmonary tuberculosis.

Authors:  Frik A Sirgel; P Bernard Fourie; Peter R Donald; Nesri Padayatchi; Roxana Rustomjee; Jonathan Levin; Giorgio Roscigno; Jennifer Norman; Helen McIlleron; Denis A Mitchison
Journal:  Am J Respir Crit Care Med       Date:  2005-04-01       Impact factor: 21.405

4.  Pharmacokinetic study of the interaction between rifampicin and ketoconazole.

Authors:  N Doble; R Shaw; C Rowland-Hill; M Lush; D W Warnock; E E Keal
Journal:  J Antimicrob Chemother       Date:  1988-05       Impact factor: 5.790

5.  Detection of mRNA transcripts and active transcription in persistent Mycobacterium tuberculosis induced by exposure to rifampin or pyrazinamide.

Authors:  Y Hu; J A Mangan; J Dhillon; K M Sole; D A Mitchison; P D Butcher; A R Coates
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  2000-11       Impact factor: 3.490

6.  Serum drug concentrations predictive of pulmonary tuberculosis outcomes.

Authors:  Jotam G Pasipanodya; Helen McIlleron; André Burger; Peter A Wash; Peter Smith; Tawanda Gumbo
Journal:  J Infect Dis       Date:  2013-07-29       Impact factor: 5.226

7.  Dynamics of submerged growth of Mycobacterium tuberculosis under aerobic and microaerophilic conditions.

Authors:  L G Wayne
Journal:  Am Rev Respir Dis       Date:  1976-10

8.  Emergence of increased resistance and extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis despite treatment adherence, South Africa.

Authors:  Alistair D Calver; Alecia A Falmer; Megan Murray; Odelia J Strauss; Elizabeth M Streicher; Madelene Hanekom; Thelma Liversage; Mothusi Masibi; Paul D van Helden; Robin M Warren; Thomas C Victor
Journal:  Emerg Infect Dis       Date:  2010-02       Impact factor: 6.883

9.  Pharmacokinetics-pharmacodynamics of rifampin in an aerosol infection model of tuberculosis.

Authors:  Ramesh Jayaram; Sheshagiri Gaonkar; Parvinder Kaur; B L Suresh; B N Mahesh; R Jayashree; Vrinda Nandi; Sowmya Bharat; R K Shandil; E Kantharaj; V Balasubramanian
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2003-07       Impact factor: 5.191

10.  Regulation of hmp gene transcription in Mycobacterium tuberculosis: effects of oxygen limitation and nitrosative and oxidative stress.

Authors:  Y Hu; P D Butcher; J A Mangan; M A Rajandream; A R Coates
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  1999-06       Impact factor: 3.490

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Authors:  Susan E Dorman; Payam Nahid; Ekaterina V Kurbatova; Stefan V Goldberg; Lorna Bozeman; William J Burman; Kwok-Chiu Chang; Michael Chen; Mark Cotton; Kelly E Dooley; Melissa Engle; Pei-Jean Feng; Courtney V Fletcher; Phan Ha; Charles M Heilig; John L Johnson; Erica Lessem; Beverly Metchock; Jose M Miro; Nguyen Viet Nhung; April C Pettit; Patrick P J Phillips; Anthony T Podany; Anne E Purfield; Kathleen Robergeau; Wadzanai Samaneka; Nigel A Scott; Erin Sizemore; Andrew Vernon; Marc Weiner; Susan Swindells; Richard E Chaisson
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2.  Higher Dosing of Rifamycins Does Not Increase Activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis in the Hollow-Fiber Infection Model.

Authors:  E D Pieterman; S van den Berg; A van der Meijden; E M Svensson; H I Bax; J E M de Steenwinkel
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3.  Pharmacokinetics, Tolerability, and Bacteriological Response of Rifampin Administered at 600, 900, and 1,200 Milligrams Daily in Patients with Pulmonary Tuberculosis.

Authors:  R E Aarnoutse; G S Kibiki; K Reither; H H Semvua; F Haraka; C M Mtabho; S G Mpagama; J van den Boogaard; I M Sumari-de Boer; C Magis-Escurra; M Wattenberg; J G M Logger; L H M Te Brake; M Hoelscher; S H Gillespie; A Colbers; P P J Phillips; G Plemper van Balen; M J Boeree
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2017-10-24       Impact factor: 5.191

Review 4.  New Approaches and Therapeutic Options for Mycobacterium tuberculosis in a Dormant State.

Authors:  Santiago Caño-Muñiz; Richard Anthony; Stefan Niemann; Jan-Willem C Alffenaar
Journal:  Clin Microbiol Rev       Date:  2017-11-29       Impact factor: 26.132

5.  Differentially Culturable Tubercule Bacilli Are Generated during Nonpulmonary Tuberculosis Infection.

Authors:  Andrew Rosser; Manish Pareek; Obolbek Turapov; Martin J Wiselka; Galina V Mukamolova
Journal:  Am J Respir Crit Care Med       Date:  2018-03-15       Impact factor: 21.405

6.  Treatment and recurrence on re-treatment tuberculosis patients: a randomized clinical trial and 7-year perspective cohort study in China.

Authors:  Jian Du; Le Zhang; Yan Ma; X-Y Chen; Q-P Ge; X-Z Tian; Weiwei Gao; Zhongwei Jia
Journal:  Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis       Date:  2019-12-05       Impact factor: 3.267

7.  Moxifloxacin Replacement in Contemporary Tuberculosis Drug Regimens Is Ineffective against Persistent Mycobacterium tuberculosis in the Cornell Mouse Model.

Authors:  Yingjun Liu; Henry Pertinez; Geraint R Davies; Stephen H Gillespie; Anthony R Coates; Yanmin Hu
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2018-06-26       Impact factor: 5.191

8.  Rifamycin action on RNA polymerase in antibiotic-tolerant Mycobacterium tuberculosis results in differentially detectable populations.

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9.  High-Dose Rifamycins Enable Shorter Oral Treatment in a Murine Model of Mycobacterium ulcerans Disease.

Authors:  Till F Omansen; Deepak Almeida; Paul J Converse; Si-Yang Li; Jin Lee; Ymkje Stienstra; Tjip van der Werf; Jacques H Grosset; Eric L Nuermberger
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