| Literature DB >> 30420849 |
Mahbobeh Montazeri1,2, Saeed Mehrzadi3, Mehdi Sharif1,4, Shahabeddin Sarvi1,5, Asal Tanzifi1,2, Sargis A Aghayan6, Ahmad Daryani1,5.
Abstract
Toxoplasma gondii (T. gondii) is a global protozoan parasite infecting up to one-third of the world population. Pyrimethamine (PYR) and sulfadiazine (SDZ) are the most widely used drugs for treatment of toxoplasmosis; however, several failure cases have been recorded as well; suggesting the existence of drug resistant strains. This review aims to give a systematic and comprehensive understanding of drug resistance in T. gondii including mechanisms of resistance and sites of drug action in parasite. Analogous amino acid substitutions in the Toxoplasma enzyme were identified to confer PYR resistance. Moreover, resistance to clindamycin, spiramycin, and azithromycin is encoded in the rRNA genes of T. gondii. However, T. gondii SDZ resistance mechanism has not been proved yet. Recently there has been a slight increase in SDZ resistance. That is why the majority of studies were carried out using SDZ. Six strains resistant to SDZ were found in clinical cases between 2013 and 2017 which among Brazilian T. gondii isolates, TgCTBr11, Ck3, and Pg1 were identified in human toxoplasmosis, as well as in livestock intended for human consumption. In conclusion, recent experimental studies in clinical cases have clearly shown that drug resistance in Toxoplasma is ongoing. Thus, establishing a more effective therapeutic scheme in the treatment of toxoplasmosis is critically needed. The emergence of T. gondii strains resistant to current drugs, reviewed here, represents a concern not only for treatment failure but also for increased clinical severity in immunocompromised patients. To improve the therapeutic outcome in patients, a greater understanding of the exact mechanisms of drug resistance in T. gondii should be developed. Thus, monitoring the presence of resistant parasites, in food products, would seem a prudent public health program.Entities:
Keywords: Toxoplasma gondii; drug resistance; drugs; mechanisms of resistance; toxoplasmosis
Year: 2018 PMID: 30420849 PMCID: PMC6215853 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2018.02587
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
List of the studies that evaluated drug resistance in T. gondii.
| Anticoccidial drugs | 0.001–100 μg/ml | Acute | HFF | RH | – | Resistance development | Incorporation of [3H]uracil and plaque assays | The resistance in | – | Ricketts and Pfefferkorn, | ||
| Arprinocid and arprinocid-N-oxide | 360 μg/orally | Acute | Swiss mice/HFF | RH | R-AnoR-1 | A mutant resistant to arprinocid-N-oxide | Incorporation of [3H]uracil and plaque assays/survival rates | A parasite mutant, R-AnoR-1 was isolated that was 16–20-fold more resistant to arprinocid-N-oxide than was the wild type RH | – | Pfefferkorn et al., | ||
| Artemisinin | 35 μg/mL | Acute | HFF | RH | – | The mechanism of action | Incorporation of [3H]uracil | Mutants resistant were selected to better understand its inhibitory effects on | – | Berens et al., | ||
| Artemisinin | 2.4, 12, or 300 μg/ml | Acute | HFF | RH, clone 2F | KN200-1, KN200-6. and STL500-10A | The molecular mode of action | Microneme secretion assays, calcium monitoring, sequencing, and qRT-PCR | Calcium homeostasis is the mechanism of action of artemisinins against apicomplexan parasites | Altering in calcium homeostasis | Nagamune et al., | ||
| Atovaquone | 1 μM | Acute | HFF | ME49 | R4, R5, R7, and R32 | The mechanisms of resistance | Incorporation of [3H]uracil, RT-PCR | Atovaquone interfered with electron transport at the cytochrome | Qo domain of cytochrome b | McFadden et al., | ||
| Atovaquone | 25 nM | Acute | Non-fermentable medium | RH | M129L and I254L | Molecular basis of resistance | Measurement of oxygen consumption, ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase activity and molecular modeling | With the two mutations from | A hydrophobic region of the binding pocket of the cytochrome bc1 complex | Kessl et al., | ||
| Atovaquone (566C80) or decoquinate | 0.1 and 0.01 μM | Acute | HFF | RH | DeqR-1 and AtoR-1 | The mechanisms of resistance | Incorporation of [3H]uracil, plaque assays, and oxygen uptake | – | Pfefferkorn et al., | |||
| Atovaquone and SDZ | 6.25, 12.5, 25, 50/40, 80, 160, and 320 mg/kg/day/10 days/gavage | Acute/Chronic | Swiss Webster mice | RH, SAF, EGS, D4, D7, CH1, and CH3 | – | The efficacy of drugs for the treatment of mice infected with six strains isolated in Minas Gerais, Brazil | PCR-RFLP, survival rates, the presence of brain cysts, ELISA | Type I strains was more resistant to atovaquone | Alterations in genes encoding these drugs targets | Alves and Vitor, | ||
| Azithromycin, spiramycin, or clindamycin | 100 ng/ml | Acute | HFF | RH | ClnR-2, AziR-l, or SprR-1 | The mechanism of action | Incorporation of [3H]uracil, plaque assay, and mitochondrial function measured by oxygen uptake | Mitochondrial protein synthesis was not the target of clindamycin or azithromycin | rRNA genes of the 35-kb genome | Pfefferkorn and Borotz, | ||
| Clindamycin | Up to 100 μg/ml | Acute | HFF | RH | ClnR-2 | The mechanism of action | Incorporation of [3H]uracil and plaque assays | A difference between the wild type and ClnR-2 in a mitochondrial ribosomal protein or in methylation of mitochondrial rRNA was seen | A mitochondrial ribosomal protein or mitochondrial rRNA genes | Pfefferkorn et al., | ||
| Diclazuril | 0.0025, 0.005, 0.01, 0.1, and 1.0 μg/ml | Acute | HFF/Mice | RH, 2 tissue cyst formers, GT-1, and WTD-3 | DicR-1 | A resistant mutant | Transmission electron microscopy assays/survival rates and cysts count in mice brains | DicR-1 mutant of the RH strain, resistant to 1.0 μg/ml diclazuril | – | Lindsay et al., | ||
| Fosmidomycin | 100 mg/kg/10 days | Acute | HFF/Webster mice | RH | – | The mechanisms of resistance | PCR, sequencing, immunofluorescence, and western blotting assays | Target DOXP reductoisomerase | Nair et al., | |||
| FUDR | 20 μg/ml | Acute | HFF | RH | FUDRR-1 | The mechanisms of resistance | Plaque assays, autoradiography, and a modified Schmidt-Thannhauser fractionation | The FUDR-resistant was resistant to wildtype | Pyrimidine salvage pathways | Pfefferkorn and Pfefferkorn, | ||
| 5-FUDR and araA | 20 μg/ml | Acute/Chronic | Mice/HFF | C strain | FR5, C-FUDRR-2 and C-ara-AR-l | Genetic recombination with | Immunofluorescence, plaque, enzyme, isotopic, and spectrophotometrically protein assays/cysts count in mice brains | Genetic recombination can readily be demonstrated with suitable mutants of | – | Pfefferkorn and Pfefferkorn, | ||
| FUDR, HU | FUDR, 10−5; HU, 2.4 × l0−4, araA, 3 × 10−4, SF, 2.7 × 10−7 M | Acute/Chronic | Mice/HFF | C strain | C-FUDRR-2, C-HIJR-1, C-ara-AR-l, and C-SFR-1 | Genetic recombination between two different drug-resistant mutants of | Plaque assays/cysts count in mice brains | The gene for FUDR resistance phenotypically suppressed the gene for HU resistance | – | Pfefferkorn and Kasper, | ||
| 1-Hydroxyquinolones | 10–100 nM | Acute | HFF | RH | N302S TgDHODH | PCR, sequencing, plasmid cloning, cDNA synthesis, replication assay, and Enzyme kinetics | The mode of action of HDQ on the | Restoration of | Hegewald et al., | |||
| Monensin | 2 ng/ml/24 h | Acute | HFF | RH strain lacking a functional hpt gene | – | Isolation of a | Plaque assays, PCR, cloning of TgMSH-1 | Disruption of TgMSH-1, an MSH in | Disruption of mitochondrion TgMSH-1 | Garrison and Arrizabalaga, | ||
| 1NM-PP1 | 250 or 1,000 nM/3 weeks | Acute | Vero cells | PLK/DUAL and PLK/hxgprt_ | PLK/DUAL res.1 and PLK/DUAL res.2 | The mechanism of resistance to 1NM-PP1 | PCR, sequencing, invasion, cell division, calcium-induced egress, and plaque assays | TgMAPK1 as a novel target for 1NM-PP1 activity | The mutation in TgMAPK1 | Sugi et al., | ||
| Oryzalin | 0.5 or 2.5 μM | Acute | HFF | RH | 49 independent resistant | The mechanisms of resistance | PCR and sequencing | α-1-tubulin | Morrissette et al., | |||
| Oryzalin | 0.5 or 2.5 μM | Acute | HFF | RH | – | Identification of resistance mutations confer resistance in | PCR, sequencing immunofluorescence staining and flow cytometry | Mutations to α-1-tubulin confer dinitroaniline resistance at a cost to microtubule function and | α-1-tubulin | Ma et al., | ||
| Oryzalin | 0.5 μm | Acute | HFF | RH | 46 resistant | The development of new anti-parasitic therapies | PCR, sequencing immunofluorescence staining, and flow cytometry | 46 | α-1-tubulin | Ma et al., | ||
| PYR | 1 μM | Acute | HFF | RH | M2, M3, M4, M2M3, M2M4, and M3M4 | The mechanisms of resistance | Incorporation of [3H]uracil, plaque assays, PCR, and sequencing | Analogous amino acid substitutions have identified in the | Analogous amino acid substitutions in amino acid | Donald and Roos, | ||
| PYR | 0, 5, 10, 15, or 20 μM | Acute | HFF | RH, P(lK), and veg | W25R, L98S, and l134H | The potential role of | Incorporation of [3H]uracil, PCR, and sequencing | PYR is a potent inhibitor of DHFR and three resistance mutations were identified, at amino acid residues | Analogous amino acid substitutions in amino acid residues | Reynolds et al., | ||
| PYR, atovaquone, and SDZ | 0.002–1/0.001–0.5/0.0005–100 mg/l/gavage | Chronic | MRC-5, THP-1 cells/White rabbit | RH, B1, ENT, ME49, and 10 strains from patients with congenital toxoplasmosis | B1, RMS-1995-ABE, and RMS-2001-MAU | The susceptibilities of | Specific enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, qRT-PCR, PCR, and direct sequencing | A higher variability was found for SDZ, with a possible resistance of three strains | – | Meneceur et al., | ||
| PYR, 5-fluorouracil, and 5-fluorocytosine | 1 μM | Acute | HFF | RH | – | The development of improved model genetic systems | DNA extraction, [3H]Xanthine incorporation, southern blot, and western blot analysis | Exogenously supplied cytosine or uracil rescued the growth of CD transgenic | DHFR-TS | Fox et al., | ||
| SDZ | 0–10 mM | Acute | Mice/Tissue culture | RH | R-SulR-5 and Swa-20 | Identification of SDZ-resistant strains of | PCR and sequencing, expression, and purification of protein | The human-derived allelic form encoding the SDZ-resistant enzyme was found in | Amino acid residues corresponding to DHPS-407 | Aspinall et al., | ||
| SDZ | 0, 75, and 1,000 μg/mL/72 h | Acute | Vero cells | RH and ME49 | RH-RSDZ, ME-49-RSDZ, TgA 103001, TgH 32006, and TgH 32045 | Identification of genotypic and/or phenotypic markers of SDZ resistance | PCR, qRT-PCR, and nucleotide sequence | – | Doliwa et al., | |||
| SDZ | 0, 75, and 1,000 μg/mL/72 h | Acute | Vero cells | RH and ME49 | RH-RSDZ, ME-49-RSDZ, TgA 103001 and TgH 32006 | The development of two SDZ-resistant strains | ELISA and enzyme immunoassay | IC50-values of SDZ were higher than 1,000μg/mL for the two natural resistant strains (RH-RSDZ and ME-49-RSDZ) | – | Doliwa et al., | ||
| SDZ | 0, 75, and 1,000 μg/mL/72 h | Acute | Vero cells | RH and ME49 | TgA 103001, TgH 32006, and TgH 32045 | The mechanisms of resistance | Q-RT-PCR, western blot, Real-time qRT-PCR, DIGE | SDZ resistance in | Differentially expressed proteins | Doliwa et al., | ||
| SDZ | 0.2–2 μM/ip | Acute | Swiss white mice/HFF | RH | R-SulR-5 | SDZ resistance in R-SulR-5 mutant of | Incorporation of [3H]uracil and plaque assays/ survival rates | R-SulR-5 was resistant to SDZ | Inhibit the synthesis of dihydropteroic acid and, the synthesis of dihydrofolic acid | Pfefferkorn et al., | ||
| SDZ | 500 mg/L/orally/10 days/l,100, 200, or 300 mg/kg/ip/6 days | Acute/Chronic | Swiss mice | RH and ME49 | TgCkBrRN3 (Ck3) and TgPgBrRN1 (Pg1) | Identification of the pathogenicity and phenotypic SDZ resistance | Parasite isolation/survival rates, ELISA, PCR-RFLP, PCR, and sequencing | The Ck3 and Pg1 isolates showed SDZ resistance | – | Oliveira et al., | ||
| SDZ | 80, 160, or 320 mg/Kg/day/gavage/10 days | Acute | Swiss mice | RH, GTI, ME49, VEG, TgCTBr03, 07, 08, 11, and 16 | TgCTBr11 | Identification of polymorphisms and profile of resistance to SDZ | PCR-RFLP, survival rates, cyst count, and ELISA assay | TgCTBr11 isolate presented a profile of resistance to SDZ | – | Silva et al., | ||
| SDZ, atovaquone, clindamycin, rotenone, antimycin, myxothiazol, and adenosine arabinoside | 0.01, 0.1, and 0.5 mM/1.5, 50, and 150 nM/0.1, 1, and 5 μg/ml/2, 20, and 100 μM | Acute | HFF or Vero cells | PLK | – | The interconversion of tachyzoite to bradyzoite | Incorporation of [3H]uracil, SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and western blots | The drugs targeted to mitochondria will cause wild type parasites to differentiate from tachyzoites to bradyzoites | – | Tomavo and Boothroyd, | ||
| 6-Thioxanthine | 20, 40, and 360 μg/m | Acute | HFF | RH | ThxR-1 | The mechanisms of resistance | Incorporation of [3H]thymidine | The lack of the hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyl transferase is the basis for the resistance of ThxR-1–6-thioxanthine | The lack of the enzyme to 6-thioxanthine | Pfefferkorn and Borotz, |
Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction.
Sulfadiazine.
Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.
1-deoxy-d-xylulose-5-phosphate.
Fluorodeoxyuridine.
Adenine arabinoside.
Hydroxyurea.
Sinefungin.
1-hydroxy-2-dodecyl-4(1) quinolone.
T. gondii MutS homologs.
Pyrimethamine.
Dihydrofolate reductase.
RMS-1995-ABE, TRS-2004-REV, TOU-1998-TRI, RMS-2005-HAG,GRE-1995-MAE,PSP-2005-MUP,GRE-1998-TRA, RMS-2003-TOU, NED, RMS-1994-LEF, RMS-2003-DJO, RMS-2001- MAU, GUY-2003-MEL.
Dihydrofolate reductase-thymidylate synthase.
Difference-gel electrophoresis.
Intraperitoneally.