PURPOSE: Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) inhibits host defense mechanisms, including autophagy. We investigated particles containing rapamycin (RAP) alone or in combination with isoniazid (INH) and rifabutin (RFB) for: targeting lung macrophages on inhalation; inducing autophagy; and killing macrophage-resident Mtb and/or augmenting anti-tuberculosis (TB) drugs. METHODS: PLGA and drugs were spray-dried. Pharmacokinetics, partial biodistribution (LC-MS/MS) and efficacy (colony forming units, qPCR, acid fast staining, histopathology) in mice following dry powder inhalation were evaluated. RESULTS: Aerodynamic diameters of formulations were 0.7-4.7 μm. Inhaled particles reached deep lungs and were phagocytosed by alveolar macrophages, yielding AUC0-48 of 102 compared to 0.1 μg/ml × h obtained with equivalent intravenous dose. RAP particles induced more autophagy in Mtb-infected macrophages than solutions. Inhaled particles containing RAP alone in daily, alternate-day and weekly dosing regimens reduced bacterial burden in lungs and spleens, inducing autophagy and phagosome-lysosome fusion. Inhalation of particles containing RAP with INH and RFB cleared the lungs and spleens of culturable bacteria. CONCLUSIONS: Targeting a potent autophagy-inducing agent to airway and lung macrophages alone is feasible, but not sufficient to eliminate Mtb. Combination of macrophage-targeted inhaled RAP with classical anti-TB drugs contributes to restoring tissue architecture and killing Mtb.
PURPOSE: Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) inhibits host defense mechanisms, including autophagy. We investigated particles containing rapamycin (RAP) alone or in combination with isoniazid (INH) and rifabutin (RFB) for: targeting lung macrophages on inhalation; inducing autophagy; and killing macrophage-resident Mtb and/or augmenting anti-tuberculosis (TB) drugs. METHODS: PLGA and drugs were spray-dried. Pharmacokinetics, partial biodistribution (LC-MS/MS) and efficacy (colony forming units, qPCR, acid fast staining, histopathology) in mice following dry powder inhalation were evaluated. RESULTS: Aerodynamic diameters of formulations were 0.7-4.7 μm. Inhaled particles reached deep lungs and were phagocytosed by alveolar macrophages, yielding AUC0-48 of 102 compared to 0.1 μg/ml × h obtained with equivalent intravenous dose. RAP particles induced more autophagy in Mtb-infected macrophages than solutions. Inhaled particles containing RAP alone in daily, alternate-day and weekly dosing regimens reduced bacterial burden in lungs and spleens, inducing autophagy and phagosome-lysosome fusion. Inhalation of particles containing RAP with INH and RFB cleared the lungs and spleens of culturable bacteria. CONCLUSIONS: Targeting a potent autophagy-inducing agent to airway and lung macrophages alone is feasible, but not sufficient to eliminate Mtb. Combination of macrophage-targeted inhaled RAP with classical anti-TB drugs contributes to restoring tissue architecture and killing Mtb.
Authors: Stephanie A Montgomery; Ellen F Young; Phillip G Durham; Katelyn E Zulauf; Laura Rank; Brittany K Miller; Jennifer D Hayden; Feng-Chang Lin; John T Welch; Anthony J Hickey; Miriam Braunstein Journal: PLoS One Date: 2018-09-27 Impact factor: 3.240
Authors: T H M Ottenhoff; M C Haks; M T Heemskerk; C J Korbee; J J Esselink; C Carvalho Dos Santos; S van Veen; I F Gordijn; F Vrieling; K V Walburg; C G Engele; K Dijkman; L Wilson; F A W Verreck Journal: Sci Rep Date: 2021-10-04 Impact factor: 4.379