High Content Screening Identifies Decaprenyl-Phosphoribose 2′ Epimerase as a Target for Intracellular Antimycobacterial Inhibitors

Thierry Christophe(Institut Pasteur Korea), Mary Jackson(Colorado State University), Hee Kyoung Jeon(Institut Pasteur Korea), Denis Fenistein(Institut Pasteur Korea), Monica Contreras-Domínguez(Institut Pasteur Korea), Jaeseung Kim(Institut Pasteur Korea), Auguste Genovesio(Institut Pasteur Korea), Jean‐Philippe Carralot(Institut Pasteur Korea), Fanny Ewann(Institut Pasteur Korea), Eun Hye Kim(Institut Pasteur Korea), Sae Yeon Lee(Institut Pasteur Korea), Sun‐Hee Kang(Institut Pasteur Korea), Min Jung Seo(Institut Pasteur Korea), Eun Jung Park(Institut Pasteur Korea), Henrieta Škovierová(Colorado State University), Hà Phạm(Colorado State University), Giovanna Riccardi(University of Pavia), Ji Youn Nam(Institut Pasteur Korea), Laurent Marsollier(Université d'Angers), Marie Kempf(Université d'Angers), Marie‐Laure Joly‐Guillou(Université d'Angers), Taegwon Oh(International Tuberculosis Research Center), Won Kyung Shin(International Tuberculosis Research Center), Zaesung No(Institut Pasteur Korea), Ulf Nehrbass(Institut Pasteur Korea), Roland Brosch(Institut Pasteur), Stewart T. Cole(École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne), Priscille Brodin(Institut Pasteur Korea)
PLoS Pathogens
October 29, 2009
Cited by 327Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

A critical feature of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative agent of human tuberculosis (TB), is its ability to survive and multiply within macrophages, making these host cells an ideal niche for persisting microbes. Killing the intracellular tubercle bacilli is a key requirement for efficient tuberculosis treatment, yet identifying potent inhibitors has been hampered by labor-intensive techniques and lack of validated targets. Here, we present the development of a phenotypic cell-based assay that uses automated confocal fluorescence microscopy for high throughput screening of chemicals that interfere with the replication of M. tuberculosis within macrophages. Screening a library of 57,000 small molecules led to the identification of 135 active compounds with potent intracellular anti-mycobacterial efficacy and no host cell toxicity. Among these, the dinitrobenzamide derivatives (DNB) showed high activity against M. tuberculosis, including extensively drug resistant (XDR) strains. More importantly, we demonstrate that incubation of M. tuberculosis with DNB inhibited the formation of both lipoarabinomannan and arabinogalactan, attributable to the inhibition of decaprenyl-phospho-arabinose synthesis catalyzed by the decaprenyl-phosphoribose 2' epimerase DprE1/DprE2. Inhibition of this new target will likely contribute to new therapeutic solutions against emerging XDR-TB. Beyond validating the high throughput/content screening approach, our results open new avenues for finding the next generation of antimicrobials.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis