Data from: Reversion of antibiotic resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis by spiroisoxazoline SMARt-420
Creators
- Blondiaux, Nicolas1
- Moune, Martin1
- Desroses, Matthieu2
- Frita, Rosangela1
- Flipo, Marion2
- Mathys, Vanessa3
- Soetaert, Karine3
- Kiass, Mehdi3
- Delorme, Vincent1
- Djaout, Kamel1
- Trebosc, Vincent4
- Kemmer, Christian4
- Wintjens, René5
- Wohlkönig, Alexandre6
- Antoine, Rudy1
- Huot, Ludovic1
- Hot, David1
- Coscolla, Mireia7
- Feldmann, Julia7
- Gagneux, Sebastien7
- Locht, Camille1
- Brodin, Priscille1
- Gitzinger, Marc4
- Deprez, Benoit2
- Willand, Nicolas2
- Baulard, Alain R.1
- 1. University of Lille
- 2. Inserm
- 3. Institut Scientifique de Santé Publique
- 4. Bioversys AG, Hochbergerstrasse 60C, 4057 Basel, Switzerland.*
- 5. Université Libre de Bruxelles
- 6. Flanders Institute for Biotechnology
- 7. Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute
Description
Antibiotic resistance is one of the biggest threats to human health globally. Alarmingly, multidrug-resistant and extensively drug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis have now spread worldwide. Some key antituberculosis antibiotics are prodrugs, for which resistance mechanisms are mainly driven by mutations in the bacterial enzymatic pathway required for their bioactivation. We have developed drug-like molecules that activate a cryptic alternative bioactivation pathway of ethionamide in M. tuberculosis, circumventing the classic activation pathway in which resistance mutations have now been observed. The first-of-its-kind molecule, named SMARt-420 (Small Molecule Aborting Resistance), not only fully reverses ethionamide-acquired resistance and clears ethionamide-resistant infection in mice, it also increases the basal sensitivity of bacteria to ethionamide.
Notes
Files
BCG_BDM41906.fastq.zip
Additional details
Related works
- Is cited by
- 10.1126/science.aag1006 (DOI)