| Literature DB >> 30631100 |
Hasan Tükenmez1, Isabel Edström2, Ramesh Ummanni3, Stina Berglund Fick4, Charlotta Sundin3, Mikael Elofsson3, Christer Larsson5.
Abstract
High-throughput screening facilities do not generally support biosafety level 3 organisms such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis. To discover not only antibacterials, but also virulence inhibitors with either bacterial or host cell targets, an assay monitoring lung fibroblast survival upon infection was developed and optimized for 384-plate format and robotic liquid handling. By using Mycobacterium marinum as surrogate organism, 28,000 compounds were screened at biosafety level 2 classification, resulting in 49 primary hits. Exclusion of substances with unfavourable properties and known antimicrobials resulted in 11 validated hits of which 7 had virulence inhibiting properties and one had bactericidal effect also in wild type Mycobacterium tuberculosis. This strategy to discover virulence inhibitors using a model organism in high-throughput screening can be a valuable tool for other researchers working on drug discovery against tuberculosis and other biosafety level 3 infectious agents.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30631100 PMCID: PMC6328581 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-37176-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1High-throughput screening assay and validation strategy. (A) The discovery phase including high-throughput screening, initial hit validation and dose response experiments performed with M. marinum in 384-well format using HTS robotics. In the validation phase, effect of the hit compounds was verified with M. tuberculosis with further dose response experiments and antimicrobial activity of selected hit compounds were performed manually in 96-well format in a BSL3 laboratory. (B) Reduction of resazurin to resorufin as response to respiration.
Figure 2Survival of MRC-5 fibroblasts after two days of infection with M. tuberculosis in the presence of various concentrations of hit compounds. The viability of MRC-5 fibroblasts was determined by resazurin conversion assay (see materials and methods). The viability of MRC-5 fibroblasts that were exposed to avirulent M. tuberculosis H37Ra was set to 100% (upper dotted line) and the rest of the samples were normalized accordingly. In the absence of any compounds, exposure to virulent H37Rv results in 33% viability compared to H37Ra exposure (lower dotted line). In addition to the hit compounds, first-line antibiotics isoniazid and rifampicin were also included as controls. The bar graph was plotted based on average and standard deviation values obtained from at least four independent replicates.
Figure 3Survival of MRC-5 fibroblasts after two days of infection with M. tuberculosis in the presence of various concentrations of eburnamonine. The viability of MRC-5 fibroblasts was determined by resazurin conversion assay (see materials and methods). The viability of MRC-5 fibroblasts that were exposed to avirulent M. tuberculosis H37Ra was set to 100% (upper dotted line) and the rest of the samples were normalized accordingly. In the absence of any compounds, exposure to virulent H37Rv results in 33% viability compared to H37Ra exposure (lower dotted line). The bar graph was plotted based on average and standard deviation values obtained from at least four independent replicates.
Figure 4Intracellular survival of M. tuberculosis in J774A.1 macrophage-like cells exposed to hit compounds. (A) Intracellular bacteria in J774A.1 cells exposed to 40 µM of hit substances at day 0, 2 and 4 of infection. 0.4% DMSO and 0.24 μg/ml isoniazid were included as negative and positive controls. (B) Scatter dot plot of bacterial numbers on day four of infection. Graphs are plotted as average and standard deviation obtained from three independent replicates. Significance levels are calculated using the one-tailed student’s t-test.