Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, University of Vermont College of Medicine, Burlington, Vermont, USA.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2013 Apr;57(4):1804-14. doi: 10.1128/AAC.02460-12. Epub 2013 Feb 4.
Cryptosporidiosis, a diarrheal disease usually caused by Cryptosporidium parvum or Cryptosporidium hominis in humans, can result in fulminant diarrhea and death in AIDS patients and chronic infection and stunting in children. Nitazoxanide, the current standard of care, has limited efficacy in children and is no more effective than placebo in patients with advanced AIDS. Unfortunately, the lack of financial incentives and the technical difficulties associated with working with Cryptosporidium parasites have crippled efforts to develop effective treatments. In order to address these obstacles, we developed and validated (Z' score = 0.21 to 0.47) a cell-based high-throughput assay and screened a library of drug repurposing candidates (the NIH Clinical Collections), with the hopes of identifying safe, FDA-approved drugs to treat cryptosporidiosis. Our screen yielded 21 compounds with confirmed activity against C. parvum growth at concentrations of <10 μM, many of which had well-defined mechanisms of action, making them useful tools to study basic biology in addition to being potential therapeutics. Additional work, including structure-activity relationship studies, identified the human 3-hydroxy-3-methyl-glutaryl-coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase inhibitor itavastatin as a potent inhibitor of C. parvum growth (50% inhibitory concentration [IC(50)] = 0.62 μM). Bioinformatic analysis of the Cryptosporidium genomes indicated that the parasites lack all known enzymes required for the synthesis of isoprenoid precursors. Additionally, itavastatin-induced growth inhibition of C. parvum was partially reversed by the addition of exogenous isopentenyl pyrophosphate, suggesting that itavastatin reduces Cryptosporidium growth via on-target inhibition of host HMG-CoA reductase and that the parasite is dependent on the host cell for synthesis of isoprenoid precursors.
隐孢子虫病是一种腹泻病,通常由人类微小隐孢子虫或隐孢子虫引起,可导致艾滋病患者暴发性腹泻和死亡,以及儿童慢性感染和发育迟缓。硝唑尼特是目前的标准治疗方法,但在儿童中的疗效有限,在晚期艾滋病患者中并不比安慰剂更有效。不幸的是,缺乏经济激励和与隐孢子虫寄生虫合作相关的技术困难,阻碍了开发有效治疗方法的努力。为了解决这些障碍,我们开发并验证了(Z'分数为 0.21 至 0.47)一种基于细胞的高通量测定法,并筛选了药物再利用候选库(NIH 临床收藏),希望能找到安全、FDA 批准的药物来治疗隐孢子虫病。我们的筛选得到了 21 种化合物,它们在低于 10 μM 的浓度下对微小隐孢子虫的生长具有确认的活性,其中许多化合物具有明确的作用机制,除了作为潜在的治疗方法外,它们还是研究基础生物学的有用工具。进一步的工作,包括构效关系研究,确定了人类 3-羟基-3-甲基戊二酰辅酶 A(HMG-CoA)还原酶抑制剂阿托伐他汀是微小隐孢子虫生长的有效抑制剂(50%抑制浓度[IC(50)]=0.62 μM)。对隐孢子虫基因组的生物信息学分析表明,寄生虫缺乏合成异戊烯基焦磷酸前体所需的所有已知酶。此外,阿托伐他汀诱导的微小隐孢子虫生长抑制作用部分被外源异戊烯基焦磷酸的加入所逆转,这表明阿托伐他汀通过抑制宿主 HMG-CoA 还原酶的靶向抑制来降低隐孢子虫的生长,并且寄生虫依赖宿主细胞合成异戊烯基焦磷酸前体。