While modern cephalosporins developed for broad spectrum antibacterial activities have never been pursued for tuberculosis (TB) therapy, we identified first generation cephalosporins having clinically relevant inhibitory concentrations, both alone and in synergistic drug combinations. Common chemical patterns required for activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis were identified using structure-activity relationships (SAR) studies. Numerous cephalosporins were synergistic with rifampicin, the cornerstone drug for TB therapy, and ethambutol, a first-line anti-TB drug. Synergy was observed even under intracellular growth conditions where beta-lactams typically have limited activities. Cephalosporins and rifampicin were 4- to 64-fold more active in combination than either drug alone; however, limited synergy was observed with rifapentine or rifabutin. Clavulanate was a key synergistic partner in triple combinations. Cephalosporins (and other beta-lactams) together with clavulanate rescued the activity of rifampicin against a rifampicin resistant strain. Synergy was not due exclusively to increased rifampicin accumulation within the mycobacterial cells. Cephalosporins were also synergistic with new anti-TB drugs such as bedaquiline and delamanid. Studies will be needed to validate their in vivo activities. However, the fact that cephalosporins are orally bioavailable with good safety profiles, together with their anti-mycobacterial activities reported here, suggest that they could be repurposed within new combinatorial TB therapies.
While modern cephalosporins developed for broad spectrum antibacterial activities have never been pursued for tuberculosis (TB) therapy, we identified first generation cephalosporins having clinically relevant inhibitory concentrations, both alone and in synergistic drug combinations. Common chemical patterns required for activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis were identified using structure-activity relationships (SAR) studies. Numerous cephalosporins were synergistic with rifampicin, the cornerstone drug for TB therapy, and ethambutol, a first-line anti-TB drug. Synergy was observed even under intracellular growth conditions where beta-lactams typically have limited activities. Cephalosporins and rifampicin were 4- to 64-fold more active in combination than either drug alone; however, limited synergy was observed with rifapentine or rifabutin. Clavulanate was a key synergistic partner in triple combinations. Cephalosporins (and other beta-lactams) together with clavulanate rescued the activity of rifampicin against a rifampicin resistant strain. Synergy was not due exclusively to increased rifampicin accumulation within the mycobacterial cells. Cephalosporins were also synergistic with new anti-TB drugs such as bedaquiline and delamanid. Studies will be needed to validate their in vivo activities. However, the fact that cephalosporins are orally bioavailable with good safety profiles, together with their anti-mycobacterial activities reported here, suggest that they could be repurposed within new combinatorial TB therapies.
Tuberculosis (TB), caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), is presently
the most deadly infectious disease worldwide. Standard TB therapy is lengthy (typically
6 months) and has very unpleasant side effects. Poor adherence to the therapy can result
in the development of drug resistant forms of the disease. Patients infected with
multi-drug resistant (MDR) or extensively drug resistant (XDR) strains must undergo
treatments that are even longer (up to 24 months) and associated with severe side
effects. Even after such prolonged and onerous therapies, only 30–50% of
patients have positive treatment outcomes1. New treatments are urgently
needed to shorten the duration of the standard treatment and for MDR and XDR-TB
therapy.Traditionally, the discovery of new antibacterial therapies has focused on finding new
compounds having novel targets2. This extremely expensive and
time-consuming strategy is currently not a practical option for most large
pharmaceutical and biotech companies. The latest studies indicate that the cost of
developing a new drug has soared to $2.6 billion3. This problem is acute
in the field of TB therapy since the intrinsic resistance systems of Mtb make
most antibiotics ineffective4. In other therapeutic areas, pharmaceutical
companies are exploring new applications for existing drugs (repurposing) to reduce the
cost of drug development5. We have previously demonstrated that
combinatorial drug therapy, traditionally designed to avoid emergence of drug resistant
Mtb strains, might also be employed to increase the efficacies of available
antibiotics, allowing them to be repurposed for TB therapy within synergistic
combinations6. Following this approach we aimed to improve the
anti-TB activity of rifampicin, the cornerstone drug for TB therapy.Today’s TB treatment guidelines, established in 1971, define a maximal dose
of rifampicin guided largely by cost and toxicity concerns rather than maximizing
antibacterial activity7. Recent clinical evidence demonstrating a direct
relation between increased dose and therapeutic efficacy strongly suggests rifampicin is
not currently administered at an optimal dose89. Furthermore,
laboratory studies of rifampicin at higher concentrations demonstrated dose-dependent
bactericidal and sterilizing activities of rifampicin against actively growing and
persister cells10. Mutations in the rpoB gene are the primary
cause of resistance to rifampicin in clinical isolates leading to treatment failure11. Studies by Louw et al. showed that efflux pump inhibitors could
potentiate the activity of rifampicin against MDR strains by increasing its
intracellular concentration12. Together, these reports suggest strongly
that if rifampicin activity could be increased by co-administration of a synergistic
partner, therapy of drug sensitive TB disease might be shortened and the prevalence of
drug resistant clinical strains reduced. Increased activity against rifampicin resistant
strains might also allow the re-introduction of rifampicin for therapy of MDR- and
XDR-TB. This would be a major advance in managing the rising numbers of TB cases that
are virtually untreatable.In pursuit of this vision, we screened an in-house library of ca. 600 commercially
available antibiotics (the Sweet library13), and found that the
cephalosporins had strong synergies with rifampicin. While the activities of some
beta-lactams against Mtb have been reported in recent years141516, cephalosporins have never been pursued for TB therapy1718. Here we report a comprehensive study of the activities of
commercially available cephalosporins against Mtb alone and in combination with
synergistic partners. We compared these activities with faropenem, meropenem and
amoxicillin plus clavulanate (beta-lactams currently proposed for TB therapy) as a guide
for further pre-clinical development.
Material and Methods
Bacterial strains, general growth conditions and reagents
Compounds and Mycobacterium strains used in this study are listed in Table S1. Mycobacteria were routinely
propagated at 37 °C in Middlebrook 7H9 broth (Difco)
supplemented with 10% Middlebrook albumin-dextrose-catalase (ADC)(Difco), 0.2%
glycerol and 0.05% (vol/vol) tyloxapol or on Middlebrook 7H10 agar plates
(Difco) supplemented with 10% (vol/vol) oleic acid-albumin-dextrose-catalase
(OADC)(Difco). Hygromycin B was added to the medium
(50 μg/mL) to ensure plasmid maintenance when
propagating the MtbH37Rv-Luc strain. This strain constitutively
expresses the luciferase luc gene from Photinus pyralis (GenBank
Accession Number M15077) cloned in a
mycobacterial shuttle plasmid derived from pACE-119.
Drug susceptibility assays
Stock solutions of compounds used in this study were always prepared fresh on the
same day of plate inoculation. For the 96-well plate format, stock solutions of
compounds were prepared in their optimal solvent and manually added to
polystyrene plates in two-fold serial dilutions. For 384-well plate format,
compounds were dissolved in DMSO and dispensed using an HP D3000 Digital
Dispenser and HP T8 Dispenserhead Cassettes (Ref No. CV081A). Susceptibility
assays were performed in both extracellular and intracellular conditions.
(i) Extracellular. Minimal Inhibitory Concentrations (MIC)
were determined in 7H9-based broth medium. This was supplemented with 0.2%
glycerol and 10% ADC without tyloxapol. When needed, other carbon sources were
added to the 7H9-based broth medium. Compound efficacy on cholesterol as the
sole carbon source was performed as follows: cholesterol was brought into
solution (100 mM) by frequent vortexing and heating at
65 °C in ethanol-tyloxapol (1:1 v/v). A
1/1,000 dilution was then added to 7H9-based broth medium to give a final
concentration of 0.1 mM cholesterol. Mycobacterial cells were grown
to an OD600 = 0.5–0.8 and stocks
were frozen at −80 °C. Upon thawing, cells
were briefly sonicated and diluted in assay medium to a final concentration of
105 cells/mL
(OD600 = 0.00125) for regular assays or
106 cells/mL
(OD600 = 0.0125) for cholesterol assays. MTT
[3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyl tetrazolium bromide] was used as the
bacterial growth indicator for M. bovis BCG and Mtb20. The Bright-Glo™ Luciferase Assay System (Promega, Madison, WI)
was used as cell growth indicator for the MtbH37Rv-Luc strain.
Luminescence was measured in an Envision Multilabel Plate Reader (PerkinElmer)
using the opaque 384-plate Ultra Sensitive luminescence mode, with a measurement
time of 50 ms per well. Plates were incubated for 5 and 7 days
before measurement of ATP production or MTT to formazan conversion,
respectively6. The lowest concentration of drug that
inhibited 90% of MTT conversion or ATP production compared to internal control
wells with no drug added was used to define MIC values (IC90).
(ii) Intracellular. Our previously described ex-vivo
checkerboard assay6 was optimized based on the protocol developed
by Sorrentino et al.19. Briefly, frozen stocks of
macrophage THP1 cells (ATCC TIB-202) were thawed in RPMI-1640 medium (Sigma)
supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (Gibco), 2 mM L-glutamine
(Sigma) and 1 mM sodium pyruvate (Sigma). THP1 cells were passaged
only 5 times and maintained without antibiotics between
2–10 × 105
cells/mL at 37 °C in a humidified, 5% CO2
atmosphere. THP1 cells
(3 × 108) were
simultaneously differentiated with phorbol myristate acetate (PMA,
40 ng/mL, Sigma) and infected for 4 hours at a
multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 1:1 with a single cell suspension of
MtbH37Rv-Luc cells. After incubation, infected cells were washed
four times to remove extracellular bacilli and resuspended in fresh RPMI medium.
Infected cells were finally resuspended
(2 × 105 cells/mL) in
RPMI medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (Hyclone), 2 mM
L-glutamine and pyruvate and dispensed in white, flat bottom 384-well plates
(Greiner) at a concentration of ca. 10,000 cells per well in a final volume of
50 μL (max. 0.5% DMSO). Plates were incubated for 5 days
under 5% CO2 atmosphere, 37 °C, 80% relative
humidity before growth assessment using the Bright-Glo Luciferase Assay System
(Promega, Madison, WI) as above described. Internal wells containing drug-free
medium with and without infected macrophages established maximum and minimal
light production, respectively. A 90% reduction in light production was
considered growth inhibition. The macrophage checkerboard data was processed as
described below. Every drug or drug combination was assayed in at least three
independent experiments. (iii) Macrophage toxicity assay. THP1
cells were processed as described above, but not infected, and incubated in the
presence of serial dilution of the compounds for 5 days. The CellTiter-Glo
Luminescent Cell Viability Assay (Promega, Madison, WI) was used to determine
the viability of the macrophages; the 50% inhibitory concentration
(IC50) was calculated relative to that for untreated cells. The
human biological samples were sourced ethically and used in this study according
to the terms of the informed consent.
A liquid version of our previously described HTSS methodology in solid
format6 was developed as the primary assay to identify
compounds that enhanced the activity of rifampicin and ethambutol (primary
compounds) against Mycobacterium. Primary compounds were screened
for synergistic interactions against our in-house assembled compound
library (Sweet library; secondary compounds) that included the majority
of commercially available antibiotics targeting DNA, RNA, protein, cell envelope
synthesis, or essential metabolic conversions, as well as other physiologically
active compounds13. The Sweet library contains ca. 600 compounds
most with unknown antimicrobial activities against mycobacteria. In order to
cover the wider concentration range possible in a single run, sets of secondary
compounds from the Sweet library (5 mM stock solution) were
dispensed in three replicate 96-well plates [containing none, 1/8xMIC and
1/4xMIC concentrations of the primary compound
(MICRIF = 0.03 μg/mL;
MICEMB = 2 μg/mL)]
at a maximum final concentration of 100 μM. Four-fold
serial dilutions were performed to a lowest concentration of
0.006 μM. M. bovis BCG cells were resuspended in
7H9 broth supplemented with 10% ADS [Composition per 1 L:
9.5 g NaCl (Sigma), 50 g Bovine Serum Albumin (Sigma),
20 g D-glucose (Bio Basic Inc.) and 2% glycerol], added to every
plate and incubated until analyses were performed as described above (Figure S1A).
Checkerboard synergy assay – Secondary assay
Drug interactions identified in our primary assay (sHTSS) against M. bovis
BCG were directly validated against Mtb strains and clinical isolates.
Synergistic interactions were analyzed both in extracellular (7H9 broth
supplemented with different carbon sources) and intracellular (THP1 infected
cells) conditions. Drug activity was determined in 96-well plate format using
the MTT or ATP assay, as described above. The fractional inhibitory
concentration (FIC) for each compound was calculated as follows:
FICA = (MIC of compound A in the presence of
compound B)/(MIC of compound A alone). Similarly, the FIC for compound B (and C
in triple combinations) was calculated. The FIC Index (FICI) was calculated as:
FICI = [FICA + FICB
(+FICc)]. Synergy was defined by FICI values ≤0.5,
antagonism by FICI values > 4.0, and no
interaction by FICI values from 0.5 to 4.06 (Figure S1B).
Mtb kill-kinetics – Tertiary assay
Frozen stocks of Mtb were inoculated in roller bottles containing 7H9
broth supplemented with glycerol and ADC without tyloxapol to a cell density of
105 cells/mL. Cultures were incubated at
37 °C for three days to allow for bacterial recovery and
exponential growth. These were used to inoculate 10-mL cultures growing in
25 cm2 tissue culture flasks and drugs were added
at the designated concentration and combinations. At every time point, cultures
were thoroughly mixed and samples (100 μL) sonicated in
a Sonics Vibra Cell, model VC 750, 750 W, 2 kHz, coupled
to a horn cup, model CV334 set at 30 seconds, Amp 1, 45%. Samples
were then 10-fold serially dilute in 1x PBS buffer with 0.1% tyloxapol and
100 μL plated on 7H10 agar plates supplemented with 10%
OADC. Agar plates were incubated at 37 °C for 14 days
and CFUs visualized under 10x magnification. This technique allowed accurate
counting of single colonies that would eventually grow into a bigger single
colony. Plates were checked again after 3 and 4 weeks of incubation to count
late growers. For kill-kinetic studies under non-replicating conditions, cells
were grown in roller bottles at 37 °C for 60 days before
culture split, drug addition and processing as described above.
Rifampicin and rifabutin intracellular accumulation assay
M. bovis BCG cultures were grown in roller bottles containing standard 7H9
media without tyloxapol to an
OD600 = ~1.0. Cells were then
diluted to OD600 = ~0.25 and
allowed to grow for 24 hours. Pre-treatment with antibiotics was
then started at their respective MIC concentrations. After overnight incubation,
cells were concentrated to a final assay
OD600 = ~15.0 in a final volume
of 10 mL. Cells were incubated at 37 °C (or
4 °C) and the accumulation assay started by the addition
of the rifamycin (pre-treatment antibiotic concentrations were maintained
throughout the accumulation assay). At defined time points,
500 μL aliquots were diluted in 1 mL of cold
PBS buffer supplemented with 0.05% tyloxapol. Cells were then washed three times
to remove extracellular rifamycin and then disrupted in a FastPrep FP120
beadbeater using 0.1 mm silica beads with three 30 sec
cycles at maximum speed. Cell debris was pelleted and supernatant recovered for
rifamycin analysis as below described. CFUs were also determined to correlate
intracellular levels of rifamycins with actual cell numbers in the sample.
Analytical methods
Ultra-Performance Liquid Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry/Mass Spectrometry
Analysis (UPLC-MS/MS) was used to quantify the amount of rifampicin, rifabutin
and cephradine. The UPLC-MS/MS system consisted of an Acquity UPLC series
(Waters Corporation, Madison, USA) coupled with a Sciex API 4000 instrument (AB
Sciex, Toronto, Canada). Twenty microliters of every sample were added to
180 μL of protein precipitant buffer (acetonitrile
/methanol 80:20 v/v) and filtered through a
0.45 μ pore size filter. Samples were then loaded into
an Acquity UPLC HSS T3
50 × 2.1 mm,
1.8 μm column (Waters Corporation, Madison, USA) and
eluted at an average flow rate of 0.4 mL/min. The MS/MS system was
operated in MRM mode (823.5/791.3 transition for rifampicin, 847.5/815.5 for
rifabutin and 350.1/158.0 for cephradine in positive ion mode). For the
accumulation assay, rifampicin and rifabutin were co-eluted using an organic
phase (A) of 100% acetonitrile and aqueous phase (B) of 10 mM
ammonium formate and 0.1% formic acid. For the stability assays in 7H9 medium,
rifampicin and cephradine were co-eluted using an organic phase (A) of 100%
acetonitrile and an aqueous phase (B) of 0.1% heptafluorobutyric acid. The
following elution protocol was applied: first, an initial constant gradient to
95% of B (5% of A) during 0.2 min; then, a constant gradient to 5%
of B (95% of A) during 1.0 min that was held constant for a further
1.5 min. Finally, the concentration of B was gradually increased to
95% (5% of A) during 2.0 min. The actual concentration of the
compounds was extrapolated from a calibration curve
(1–50,000 ng/mL range) of rifampicin, rifabutin and
cephradine in culture media.
Results
Synergy screens identified cephalosporins as the strongest synergistic
partners of rifampicin
We devised a 96-well plate semi high-throughput synergy screen (sHTSS) using
liquid cultures of M. bovis BCG to identify compounds that are
synergistic with rifampicin. To maximize our hit rate, we used an
in-house library (the Sweet library of ca. 600 compounds)13 that included the majority of commercially available antibiotics
(more than 500). Antimicrobial activities of each compound in the Sweet library
were determined alone or in the presence of our primary compound, rifampicin
(1/8xMIC or 1/4xMIC) (Figure S1).
Fifty hits were identified, representing about 10% of the antibiotics in the
Sweet library. A secondary assay validated synergy for nine out of eleven
randomly selected hit compounds, including the first-line anti-TB drug
ethambutol (Table S2). When the same
screen of the Sweet library was performed using ethambutol instead of rifampicin
as the primary antibiotic, the rifampicin/ethambutol synergy was again
identified, thereby confirming sHTSS reproducibility. In addition, not only
rifampicin but also two other antibiotics (ansamycins) having related structures
and targeting the RNA polymerase (RNAP) were identified as having synergy with
ethambutol (Table S2). However, the
most striking finding of the sHTSS was the large proportion of cell wall
inhibitors identified as hits with rifampicin (14 out of 50 hits; 28%) or
ethambutol (13 out of 65 hits; 20%). These mainly included the beta-lactam
family of drugs and more specifically the cephalosporins (Table S2).
Cephalosporins: Structure-activity relationship (SAR) studies reveal
Mtb-specific features
We assembled a library of first, second, third, and forth generation
cephalosporins and determined their in vitro activities against a panel
of three standard Mtb laboratory strains and eight clinical isolates
(four drug susceptible and four drug resistant) from British Columbia21. Other clinically used cell wall targeting compounds were also
included in this study (Table S3).
The MICs for any given cephalosporin were consistent and fell within a 4-fold
range for all laboratory strains; MICs were somewhat more dispersed for the
clinical isolates (probably reflecting strain genetic heterogeneity) with an
overall trend of slightly decreased activity against resistant isolates.
Unexpectedly, older first generation cephalosporins were generally more potent
against Mtb than later generations (Fig. 1).
Figure 1
Antimicrobial activity of cephalosporins against Mycobacterium
tuberculosis strains, including multidrug resistant clinical
isolates.
BC strains are clinical isolates from British Columbia, Canada. DS, Drug
sensitive; MDR, multi-drug resistant. GEN, first, second and third
cephalosporin generation; ROA, route of administration; po, oral; iv,
intravenous.
From an historical perspective, generations of cephalosporins were sequentially
designed to increase broad-spectrum activity and to counteract drug resistance
in a variety of non-Mtb pathogens22. These structural
changes apparently altered their anti-mycobacterial activities, probably
reflecting unrelated, unique features of the mycobacterial cell wall. Early
reports already identified a SAR for Mtb, i.e., pyridyl or phenyl
moieties in a side chain at the C7 position of the cephalosporin were correlated
with anti-tuberculosis activity18. We thus inferred a qualitative
SAR based on current commercially available cephalosporins. For this analysis,
we created groups based on their anti-mycobacterial activity. The first group
included those compounds with an activity threshold of
8 μg/mL; a second group with intermediate/moderate
activity
(MIC = 16–64 μg/mL);
and a third group with no activity
(MIC > 128 μg/mL) (Table S4). Common chemical features
were identified among the active compounds, which could be further split into
three representative series (Fig. 2). Analyses of both the
“cephalexin and cefdinir series” indicated that a
smaller lipophilic group in the C3 position of the cephem ring was beneficial
for anti-mycobacterial activity; although at this position the exchange of the
methyl group of cephalexin to the chloro atom of cefaclor resulted in a complete
loss of activity. In addition, the comparison of cefadroxil and cefapirin (in
the cephalexin and cefapirin series, respectively) indicated that the presence
of a hydrogen bond acceptor in the 4 position of the right hand side (RHS)
aromatic ring (either as a hetero atom within the cycle or as an extracyclic
group such as a hydroxyl) was also beneficial for activity. Similarly, cefdinir
(and analogs in the “cefdinir series”) also contained a
hydrogen bond acceptor (amine) in the RHS of the molecule. In this series,
activity was also governed by modifications in the C3 position of the cephem
ring. It is interesting to note that cephradine contains a cyclohexadiene in the
RHS of the molecule and it was also active. These observations indicated common
generation-independent chemical patterns for specific activity against
Mtb.
Figure 2
Qualitative SAR of cephalosporins against M. tuberculosis
H37Rv.
Chemical elements highlighted in red indicate modifications from the parent
compounds cephalexin, cefapirin and cefdinir.
Cephalosporin synergy with rifampicin is conserved in different
media
Most of the cephalosporins tested (with the exception of ceftibuten, cefuroxime,
and cefditoren pivoxil) displayed synergy with rifampicin; first-generation
cephalosporinscephalexin, cephradine, and cefadroxil had the strongest
synergisms. The third generation cephalosporin, cefdinir, was the most active
alone, but had a weaker synergistic profile (Table S3). These studies were conducted using
7H9 media supplemented with ADC and glycerol. Media conditions used by teams
working on TB drug development are not standardized23. TB drug
screening programs have found that the anti-mycobacterial activities of certain
compounds are carbon source (glycerol) dependent24. Other
supplements that alter cell envelope composition, such as oleic acid or
detergents (Tween or Tyloxapol), also have effects on antibiotic activity2526. In addition, the chemical nature of cephalosporins might
affect their activity in a medium-dependent fashion27. To
investigate possible medium-dependent activities of cephalosporins and their
synergies with rifampicin, we performed synergy studies with cefadroxil and
cefdinir in media containing various carbon sources or detergents. Faropenem (a
penem) and meropenem (a carbapenem), two beta-lactams recently evaluated in a
clinical trial28, were also included for comparison (Fig. 3). Cefadroxil displayed the largest medium dependent
variations in anti-microbial activity but it retained the strongest synergistic
profile in all the different media tested. In contrast, meropenem displayed
little synergy, and in some cases a lack of interaction with rifampicin. In
general, the antimicrobial activities of the cephalosporins alone and their
synergistic profiles in combination with rifampicin were maintained in media
based on oleic acid, cholesterol, glycerol or dextrose. Interestingly, the
addition of Tyloxapol had a major potentiating effect, correlating with previous
observations where alteration of the mycobacterial cell wall mycolic acid layer
might allow better access of the beta-lactams to their targets in the
peptidoglycan sub-layer2930; synergy in the presence of
Tyloxapol, however, remained mostly unchanged.
Figure 3
Synergistic interactions between rifampicin and selected beta-lactams against
M. tuberculosis H37Rv cultured in different media.
“RIF FICI” is the Fractional Inhibitory Concentration
Index of every compound in combination with rifampicin. An
FICI ≤ 0.5 indicates synergy. An
FICI > 0.5 indicates no interaction. Nb,
7H9 + GLY + ADC without
Tyloxapol is the standard medium used in all other experiments.
The intracellular anti-mycobacterial activities of cephalosporins can be
synergistically enhanced by rifampicin
Although less efficient than against extracellular bacteria, cephalosporins (and
beta-lactams in general) display measurable intracellular activities31. Similarly, we found that some cephalosporins such as
cephradine, cefadroxil or cephalexin, were less active against Mtb inside
THP1 macrophages than against extracellular bacteria (Table S3). In some cases, these limitations
could be overcome using a synergistic combination. For example, the presence of
rifampicin at sub-MIC concentrations made cefadroxil active against
intracellular Mtb and the same trend was observed for cefdinir.
Intracellular synergy was also observed for faropenem but not for meropenem
(Fig. 4A), which displayed the weakest synergistic
profile with rifampicin against intracellular and extracellular bacteria (Table S3). Despite the fact that some
beta-lactams might have poor intracellular activity, these analyses demonstrated
that intracellular synergies with rifampicin could compensate for their reduced
activities alone.
Figure 4
Dose response characterization of selected beta-lactam and rifamycin
combinations against M. tuberculosis.
(A) Intracellular (THP1) dose response curves of beta-lactams (BLM)
alone and in the presence of 1/4xMIC concentrations of rifampicin against
M. tuberculosis H37Rv-Luc. Intracellular
MICRIF = 16 ng/mL. (B)
Comparison of the synergistic effects of rifampicin and rifabutin with
beta-lactams in 7H9 medium. Dose response studies of the beta-lactams in
combination with sub-inhibitory concentrations of rifampicin (RIF;
2 ng/mL; 1/8xMIC) and rifabutin (RBT; 0.5 ng/mL;
1/4xMIC). The MIC of rifampicin and rifabutin were 16 and
2 ng/mL, respectively.
Synergy with cephalosporins is not a general characteristic of
rifamycins
We tested the abilities of different beta-lactams to act in synergy with other
representative rifamycins32. The dose response curves of
cefadroxil, cefdinir, faropenem, and meropenem were calculated alone and in
combination with rifampicin and rifabutin. Surprisingly, synergies were observed
with rifampicin but not with rifabutin (Fig. 4B). We then
determined the MICs of other cephalosporins, amoxicillin and cell-wall targeting
compounds alone and in the presence of sub-inhibitory concentrations of the
rifamycins (including rifapentine) (Table
S5). While cephalosporins, ethambutol and the other beta-lactams
tested interacted with rifampicin, synergy with rifapentine was consistently
lower. In fact, only those drugs having an MIC reduction higher than 16-fold in
the presence of rifampicin, such as cefadroxil and cephradine, displayed some
interaction with rifapentine. Confirming our previous observations, no synergy
was observed with rifabutin.
Increased accumulation of rifampicin in mycobacterial cells does not fully
explain its synergy with beta-lactams
Beta-lactams that destabilize the peptidoglycan layer in the cell wall might
cause increased permeability and intracellular accumulation of rifampicin, thus
rationalizing synergy. To test this hypothesis, we performed rifampicin
accumulation assays. Ethambutol increases rifampicin uptake25,
presumably underlying the synergy between these two drugs (Table S3). Proof of concept experiments
confirmed that rifampicin accumulation was an active process; residual
accumulation was observed at low temperature (4 °C),
probably associated with unspecific binding to the bacterial cell wall or
passive diffusion, while a saturable active rifampicin uptake was observed at
37 °C (Figure
S2A). As expected25, there was a ca. 2.5-fold increase
in rifampicin accumulation when the cells were pre-treated with ethambutol but
not when they were pre-treated with isoniazid (we found no synergy betweenisoniazid and rifampicin) (Fig. 5). We therefore used
these two drugs in our accumulation assay as internal positive and negative
controls. Pre-treatment with either cefadroxil or amoxicillin (with and without
clavulanate), faropenem or meropenem had a range of effects on rifampicin
accumulation. The largest effect was elicited by the combination of amoxicillin
and clavulanate. Cefadroxil had little or no effect, despite the fact that it
was the strongest synergistic partner and while meropenem, the weakest
synergistic partner, induced increases similar to those of ethambutol (Figure S2B).
Figure 5
Rifamycin accumulation in M. bovis BGC.
Rifampicin and rifabutin at 1 μg/mL were added to
cell cultures incubated at 37 °C. Cells were
pre-treated overnight in the presence of ethambutol (positive synergistic
control; 5 μg/mL) or isoniazid (negative control;
0.25 μg/mL).
We then used rifabutin to further investigate the potential correlation between
anti-mycobacterial activity and the intracellular accumulation of rifampicin.
Rifabutin is more lipophilic than rifampicin; this characteristic may accelerate
its penetration through the Mtb envelope, thus increasing its
activity32. Indeed, rifabutin accumulated intracellularly to
higher levels than rifampicin (Fig. 5); rifabutin uptake
was higher than that of rifampicin (even when rifampicin uptake was increased by
ethambutol or beta-lactams) (Figure
S2). Rifabutin’s lack of synergism (Fig.
4B, Table S5) with
beta-lactams may reflect increased rates of cell penetration that cannot be
further potentiated by beta-lactam treatment. On average, the level of synergism
betweenrifampicin and the beta-lactams allowed up to 16-fold reduction in the
MIC of rifampicin, a slightly higher reduction than the MIC ratio of
rifabutin/rifampicin (rifabutin’s MIC is ca. 8-fold lower than that
of rifampicin). However, the observation that beta-lactams induced less than
2.5-fold increases in rifampicin accumulation indicated that they do not mimic
the more efficient rifabutin pathway of entry, which allows 6-10-fold increased
levels of accumulation (Fig. 5). In summary, the strong
synergistic interactions betweencephalosporins (and other beta-lactams) and
rifampicin cannot exclusively be explained by the slight increase in the
intracellular accumulation of rifampicin in the presence of some cell-wall
targeting compounds since there was no correlation between the strength of the
synergistic interactions and the levels of rifampicin accumulation.
The synergistic combination of rifampicin with cephalosporins is
bactericidal and sterilizing
Kill kinetic assays against replicating bacteria exposed to antibiotics at
sub-MIC concentrations were performed to study the bactericidal and sterilizing
activities of the synergistic combinations (Fig. 6).
Combinations of cephradine with either rifampicin or ethambutol were able to
reduce CFUs up to 3-logs within seven days. Interestingly, addition of
cephradine to rifampicin and ethambutol in a triple combination at sub-MIC
concentrations made these combinations sterilizing (Fig.
6A). We then increased drug concentrations to levels above MIC to
determine minimal concentrations needed for sterilizing activity. Cephradine and
rifampicin alone displayed dose-dependent bactericidal activity and sterilizing
activity in combination (Fig. 6B). The pharmacodynamic
parameters that best predict the anti-bacterial activity of the beta-lactams and
rifampicin are time over MIC and the AUC over MIC3334. We
employed a static model where cultures were maintained in the same medium and
drugs were only added at the beginning of the experiment. In the absence of
bacteria, the half-life stability of cephradine and rifampicin in the 7H9 medium
was approximately six and seven days, respectively, similar to described
elsewhere3536. Their stabilities were independent of the
presence of the partner, indicating absence of direct drug-drug interactions.
Degradation kinetics and remaining drug concentrations due to thermal
instability matched kill kinetics and might explain the observed growth rebound
(Fig. 6C). The extended killing observed with the
combination in the absence of effective drug concentrations confirmed their
synergistic profile (Fig. 6B). Under non-replicative
conditions, cephradine lost its anti-bacterial activity together with its
synergistic interaction with rifampicin (Figure S3), consistent with the specificity of some cephalosporins
for actively replicating bacteria.
Figure 6
Kill kinetics of rifampicin, cephradine and ethambutol alone and in
combination against M. tuberculosis H37Rv.
(A) Sub-inhibitory concentrations of cephradine (0.5xMIC,
4 μg/mL) enhanced the antibacterial and sterilizing
activities of rifampicin and ethambutol (no growth observed after 60 days;
upper right panel). (B) Dose dependent sterilizing activity of
cephradine. Increased concentrations of cephradine (4xMIC,
32 μg/mL) enhanced the sterilizing activity of
rifampicin (no growth observed after 60 days; bottom middle panel).
(C) The stabilities of rifampicin and cephradine alone and in
combination in 7H9 media were analysed by UPLC-MS/MS. MIC values of the
individual drugs are used to express drug concentrations (i.e., 1, 4,
10-fold their MIC concentrations). RIF, rifampicin; CPD, cephradine; EMB,
ethambutol.
MICRIF = 0.03 μg/mL;
MICCPD = 8 μg/mL;
MICEMB = 2 μg/mL.
Clavulanate: a key partner in triple synergistic combinations effective
against rifampicin resistant M. tuberculosis strains
While clavulanate had a high MIC against Mtb
(>64 μg/mL), it was synergistic with rifampicin
(Table S3). Pairwise synergies
among rifampicin, beta-lactams and clavulanate suggested that the addition of
clavulanate could further enhance the anti-tuberculosis activities of
rifampicin/beta-lactam combinations. Therefore, we tested rifampicin in
combination with beta-lactams, in the presence and absence of sub-inhibitory
concentrations of clavulanate. We used the laboratory strain H37Rv and a
rifampicin-resistant derivative
(MIC > 64 μg/mL)
resulting from a single point mutation (H526D) in the beta subunit of the RNA
polymerase to limit genetic background heterogeneity. Rifampicin dose response
analyses using H37Rv H526D demonstrated that the addition of a beta-lactam plus
clavulanate had activities similar to rifabutin (used against MDR and XDR
strains37). Among the four beta-lactams tested, amoxicillin
had the strongest effect, followed by cefadroxil, meropenem and finally
faropenem (whose synergistic activity was marginal). These combinations were
even more effective than rifabutin against the parental drug susceptible H37Rv
(Fig. 7). These studies not only demonstrated that
beta-lactams increased rifampicin activity but also confirmed our MIC studies
showing that rifampicin greatly enhanced the activities of its beta-lactam
partners. Clavulanate played a critical role in these triple drug interactions,
especially for beta-lactams whose activities were clavulanate-dependent such as
amoxicillin and cefadroxil. Reinforcing this concept, faropenem, whose activity
was not strongly affected by clavulanate, had weak effects in the triple
combination (Figure S4).
Figure 7
Synergistic triple combinations of rifampicin and beta-lactams.
Dose response curves of rifampicin alone and in the presence of several
beta-lactam combinations against M. tuberculosis H37Rv (rifampicin
susceptible) and its rifampicin resistant derivative M. tuberculosis
H37Rv H526D. Dose response curve of rifabutin were also included for
comparison. For the drug susceptible strain, beta-lactam and clavulanate
concentrations were 0.06 μg/mL and
8 μg/mL, respectively. For the rifampicin resistant
strain, beta-lactam and clavulanate concentrations were
0.125 μg/mL and 5 μg/mL,
respectively. AMX, amoxicillin; CFX, cefadroxil; CLV, clavulanate; FAR,
faropenem; MER, meropenem; RBT, rifabutin; RIF, rifampicin.
Beta-lactam inclusion in de novo therapies: synergy with newly
developed anti-TB drugs
In vitro synergy assays with cephradine and faropenem in combination with
a panel of sixteen first-line, second-line and newly developed drugs for TB
therapy were performed to further explore the repurposing potential of
beta-lactams (Fig. 8). As expected, synergy was observed
with both rifampicin and ethambutol but not with the first-line drug isoniazid.
Aminoglycosides and fluoroquinolones, well-established second-line drugs, and
other drugs typically used as last resort treatment for MDR- and XDR-TB, such as
PAS, ethionamide or linezolid, displayed no interaction patterns. In contrast,
there were strong synergistic interactions of the beta-lactams with the newly
developed anti-TB drugs bedaquiline, delamanid and PA-824 (pretomanid).
Synergism was not observed with SQ-109, an ethambutol analog with an
anti-bacterial mode of action that is more related to isoniazid38.
Figure 8
Synergistic interactions of cephradine and faropenem with a panel of anti-TB
drugs against M. tuberculosis H37Rv.
Fractional inhibitory concentrations of every drug within every pairwise
combination were calculated and plotted as isobolograms to allow visual
inspection of the drug interactions. A straight line indicates a
non-interaction profile while curves closer to the axis origins and falling
within the box indicate a synergistic profile. Isobologram curves are colour
coded according to their synergistic profile. Red, synergistic interaction;
Green, additive; and blue, no interaction. Cephradine, solid lines;
faropenem, broken lines.
Discussion
Drug repurposing is a strategy gathering momentum throughout the pharmaceutical
industry, driven by the high costs of traditional drug development3539. Drug development for neglected diseases such as TB, mainly
affecting developing countries, is especially complicated due to the perception by
big pharmaceutical companies that there is insufficient return on capital
investment. In addition, promising pre-clinical development of new chemical entities
driven by not-for-profit partnerships40 are faced with unexpected
clinical roadblocks due to toxicities not predicted by pre-clinical models41. To overcome these limitations, new partnership models4243 and drug repurposing strategies are currently being
explored6. We previously demonstrated that clinically approved
antibiotics considered to be inactive against Mtb might be introduced for TB
therapy if administered within synergistic combinations6. Here we
demonstrated that this approach could be similarly applied to well-established
anti-TB drugs in order to increase their efficacy or reduce their toxicity. For
this, we focused on rifampicin, one of the cornerstone drugs for TB therapy. We
screened an in-house library of clinically used antibiotics and were able to
find synergistic partners of rifampicin. While a wide variety of compounds were
identified, including a front line TB drug (ethambutol), we focused our studies on
the large pool of cephalosporin antibiotics that were strong enhancers of rifampicin
activity (Table S2). Cephalosporin
activities, alone and in synergistic combinations with other beta lactams, were
compared to beta-lactam combinations already proposed for TB therapy (clavulanate
with faropenem, meropenem, or amoxicillin), to assess their potential for TB
therapy.Beta-lactams, one of the largest groups of antibiotics available today, have a long
track record of safe clinical use to treat infections caused by Gram-positive and
Gram-negative bacteria22. Their use as anti-tuberculosis drugs has
been limited by the lack of interest of pharmaceutical companies, the availability
of reliable animal models44 and the intrinsic resistance of
Mtb to beta-lactams. Indeed, the presence of a beta-lactamase (BlaC) able
to degrade these antibiotics and the impermeability of the cell envelope led to the
belief that beta-lactams were ineffective for TB therapy. As early as in the 1980s
it was recognized that the combination of amoxicillin and clavulanate was active
against Mtb in vitro45; however clinical efficacy in early
bactericidal activity (EBA) studies was not consistently shown4647.
A renewed interest in the beta-lactams as new anti-TB drugs arose after a report
demonstrated the in vitro activity of meropenem combined with clavulanate
against XDR strains14. A recent study also reported synergy of
carbapenems with rifampicin against Mtb48. However, although
carbapenems have anecdotally been used successfully as part of salvage therapies for
XDR patients, they have to be administered intravenously1649. This
would not be a practical approach in under-resourced countries, where orally
delivered drugs are preferred. Recently, an EBA Phase II clinical trial has
validated the promising potential of a carbapenem combined with amoxicillin and
clavulanic acid for TB therapy28. This EBA study was able to detect
activity of intravenous meropenem but not an orally available alternative,
faropenem. Although faropenem has shown efficacy in combination with amoxicillin,
clavulanate, and probenicid using a murine model of tuberculosis50,
the lack of response in the EBA study could be due to the low levels of exposure and
limited time above the MIC concentration. This reflects its lower bioavailability
when administered as its sodium salt, the one readily available in the market. Other
beta-lactams should thus be explored for TB therapy.Among the beta-lactams, we identified the cephalosporins as the most promising group
of drugs synergistic with rifampicin (Table
S2). The cephalosporins have traditionally received little attention for
TB treatment although they are orally available with good safety profiles, and very
few drug-drug interactions (none reported with rifampicin or ethambutol).
Interestingly, we found that while first-generation cephalosporins were highly
potent, later generations generally had less activity (Fig.
1). This is contrary to previous studies with other bacteria where
third-generation cephalosporins were more active against Gram-negative bacilli
compared to first- or second-generation cephalosporins51. We thus
assembled a qualitative SAR defining specific rules for increased activity against
Mtb (Fig. 2); this information might allow design
of a Mtb-specific cephalosporin. Such a compound would limit the enrichment
of beta-lactam resistance genes in the gut microbiome. Increased specificity for
Mtb would also serve to minimize gastro-intestinal side effects caused by
broad-spectrum beta-lactam antibiotics. This approach, although promising and worth
pursuing, would be independent of our fast-track repurposing vision of bringing new
drugs for TB treatment in the shortest period possible.The long treatment required to cure TB is, in part, rationalized by the need to
eradicate drug tolerant forms of Mtb that reside within host cells, thus
limiting antibiotic efficacy. Beta-lactams are known to be less effective against
intracellular pathogens due to their inability to penetrate host membranes52. Here we demonstrated that the intracellular activity of the
cephalosporins and faropenem could be enhanced in the presence of rifampicin, a
synergistic partner that makes the bacteria sensitive to lower levels of
intracellular beta-lactams (Fig. 4A).The general concept that increases in Mtb permeability can determine
sensitivity to both beta-lactams and rifampicin25 led us to explore
the idea that synergy is mediated by shared effects on the cell envelope. In fact,
the presence of Tyloxapol in the media, a detergent routinely added to prevent cell
clumping by altering the outer envelope structure of mycobacteria, had major effects
on the activities of beta-lactams or rifampicin alone, while it had very little
effect on their levels of synergy (Fig. 3). This suggested
that the drug permeability barriers affected by Tyloxapol are not those that
determine synergy. Consistent with this notion, the levels of intracellular
accumulation of rifampicin in cells pre-treated with a synergistic beta-lactam did
not fully explain the strong synergism of the combination; rates of rifampicin
uptake in the presence of beta-lactams were far lower than those of rifabutin, a
comparable antibiotic that is more lipophilic and more active against Mtb
(Fig. 5). The observation that synergy of rifabutin with
the beta-lactams was negligible compared to rifampicin supports the hypothesis that
rifabutin is able to enter the cell more rapidly, thereby bypassing the synergistic
toxicities that can be elicited by various beta-lactams. In the parental strain
H37Rv, rifampicin’s MIC was 8-fold higher than the MIC of rifabutin,
whereas in the rifampicin resistant mutant (MtbH37Rv H526D)
rifampicin’s MIC was at least 64-fold higher than rifabutin (Fig. 7). The higher efficacy of rifabutin relative to rifampicin
may reflect its increased accumulation (Fig. 5); this might be
due to permeability or to the specificity of efflux systems for different
rifamycins12.In addition to permeability changes mediating synergy, there are likely to be other
synergistic interactions for specific beta-lactams or rifamycins. For example, while
rifampicin and rifabutin bind within the same region of the RNAP, these two
rifamycins may have different effects on RNAP activity and gene expression.
Rifabutin binding to RNAP differs slightly from that of rifampicin53
and may elicit a different transcriptional response. Indeed minor changes within
this region of RNAP generated by rifampicin resistance mutations can induce
different metabolic responses54. These different effects elicited by
rifampicin or rifabutin are also reflected in their different synergies with
beta-lactams. Complex transcriptional perturbations and cell wall defects,
independently induced by these drugs, act together to inhibit essential bacterial
functions. Importantly, cephradine and faropenem also displayed synergy with a
variety of antibiotics including ethambutol, bedaquiline, delamanid, clofazimine,
thioridazine, and PA824 but not with isoniazid, ethionamide, SQ109, PAS,
aminoglycosides or fluoroquinolones (Fig. 8). Although
elucidating the precise mode of action of these synergistic combinations is beyond
the scope of this work, understanding the molecular mechanisms behind them would
facilitate a rational design for combination therapies that include
beta-lactams.Dose response studies of rifampicin alone and in combination with beta-lactams under
both extracellular (7H9 broth) and intracellular (Mtb-infected THP1 cells)
growth conditions allowed us to identify the cephalosporins with the best potential
(Fig. 1, Table
S3). We concluded that cephradine and cefadroxil were the most potent
cephalosporins, having strong synergistic activities with rifampicin. In addition,
they have the best pharmacological properties, including oral bioavailability. For
example, cefadroxil is commercialized under the brand name Duricef. A single
500 mg oral dose of cefadroxil would reach plasma concentrations of ca.
16 μg/mL (Table
S6), well above the synergistic MIC (Table S5). One concern about the clinical use of beta-lactams is their
limited exposure time due to their short pharmacokinetic half-life. Cefadroxil could
be clinically effective as a single drug and its efficacy could be further increased
in a synergistic combination.Beta-lactams (including cephalosporins) are generally more active against replicating
extracellular bacteria, the main bacterial pool found in TB patients that seek
initial clinical assistance55. The combination of cephalosporins with
rifampicin (and also ethambutol) was bactericidal and sterilizing against
extracellular bacteria growing in liquid cultures (Fig. 6).
Clavulanate was also found to be a key synergistic partner for both rifampicin and
beta-lactams; this could potentially lead to re-introduction of rifampicin for MDR-
and XDR-TB therapy (Fig. 7). For clinical use, clavulanate is
only available in combination with amoxicillin (Augmentin). Interestingly,
amoxicillin also displays synergy with some beta-lactams (Table S7), which could further potentiate their
activities. However, the length of cephalosporin/beta-lactam treatment should be
limited to the first weeks of therapy to avoid complications due to long exposure
and unspecific targeting of the patients’ microbiota.Our studies suggest that selected cephalosporins alone and in combination with
rifampicin (or ethambutol) should be pursued as potential TB therapies. We assembled
in vitro data that lays the foundations for future development. Our
studies of cephalosporin activities using a small set of clinical isolates (4 drug
susceptible and 4 MDR) suggested a trend of slightly reduced susceptibility in the
MDR strains (Fig. 1). Analyzing a larger set of clinical
Mtb isolates from different geographical regions would be needed to
define actual MIC90 ranges of selected cephalosporins. The mouse model is
the standard in vivo system used for testing new potential anti-TB therapies.
However, this approach is of limited value for beta-lactams since their
pharmacokinetics and efficacy in mice do not predict those in humans. This reflects
the fact that mice express an enzyme that degrades beta lactams (renal
dehydropeptidase I, DPH-I) at levels that are several orders of magnitude higher
than in humans4456. However, because beta-lactams are previously
approved drugs with established dosages and known safety profiles, these
combinations could be readily tested in the clinic. In fact, other beta-lactams
(meropenem and faropenem in combination with amoxicillin-clavulanate) are currently
being pursued as potential TB therapies28. We report that rifampicin
activity can be also increased in combination with single cephalosporins or multiple
beta-lactams, including clavulanate. Such triple synergies should be explored as
ways to optimize the activity of rifampicin, the cornerstone drug in TB therapy, for
treating drug sensitive and perhaps MDR and XDR-TB infections. TB drug development
is evolving towards completely new therapeutic combinations able to treat all forms
of the disease that would not depend on the resistance profile of the strain57. The activities of cephalosporins (as well as other beta-lactams)
alone and in synergy with other new anti-TB drugs such as bedaquiline, pretomanid
(PA-824), and delamanid, suggest additional combinations that might reduce treatment
time for standard and MDR therapies.
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Ramón-García, S. et
al. Repurposing clinically approved cephalosporins for tuberculosis therapy.
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