Fief Cole A, Hoang Kristine G, Phipps Stephen D, Wallace Jessica L, Deweese Joseph E
Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences and Department of Pharmacy Practice, Lipscomb University College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences, One University Park Drive, Nashville, Tennessee 37204-3951, United States.
Veterans Affairs Tennessee Valley Healthcare System, 1310 24th, Avenue South, Nashville, Tennessee 37232, United States.
ACS Omega. 2019 Feb 22;4(2):4049-4055. doi: 10.1021/acsomega.8b03428. eCollection 2019 Feb 28.
Fluoroquinolones are a class of widely prescribed antibiotics with a broad range of activity against Gram-positive, Gram-negative, and some atypical microbes. Unfortunately, these drugs are associated with significant adverse events including neuropathy, tendinopathy, cardiac rhythm abnormalities, and mental health side effects. The mechanism by which fluoroquinolones cause many of these toxicities is unknown. The antibacterial mechanism of action involves disruption of the catalytic mechanism of type-II topoisomerases in bacteria, namely topoisomerase IV and DNA gyrase. Fluoroquinolones inhibit the ability of the enzymes to ligate cleaved DNA and result in single- and double-stranded DNA breaks. Thus, there is an interest in investigating whether human topoisomerase II is involved in mediating the adverse events associated with quinolones. Previous studies demonstrate some response of human topoisomerase IIα and IIβ to high levels of ciprofloxacin. However, it is not clear whether the concentration of ciprofloxacin utilized in those studies corresponds to concentrations that would be routinely achievable in patients. Therefore, this study set out to examine three clinically relevant fluoroquinolones along with two older agents to determine whether these compounds display activity against topoisomerase IIα and IIβ at drug concentrations that more closely approximate typical patient plasma values. On the basis of our evidence, none of the quinolones studied were able to poison DNA cleavage by either human enzyme. Ciprofloxacin, desethylene-ciprofloxacin, and the recently removed from market gemifloxacin were able to inhibit topoisomerase II-mediated DNA relaxation at concentrations of 200-300 μM. On the basis of these data, we propose that human topoisomerase II is not likely to be the main cause of these adverse events and that additional targets need to be identified to clarify the mechanisms underlying quinolone toxicities.
氟喹诺酮类是一类广泛应用的抗生素,对革兰氏阳性菌、革兰氏阴性菌和一些非典型微生物具有广泛的活性。不幸的是,这些药物与严重的不良事件有关,包括神经病变、肌腱病变、心律异常和心理健康副作用。氟喹诺酮类药物导致许多这些毒性的机制尚不清楚。其抗菌作用机制涉及破坏细菌中II型拓扑异构酶的催化机制,即拓扑异构酶IV和DNA回旋酶。氟喹诺酮类药物抑制这些酶连接切割后DNA的能力,导致单链和双链DNA断裂。因此,人们有兴趣研究人类拓扑异构酶II是否参与介导与喹诺酮类药物相关的不良事件。先前的研究表明,人类拓扑异构酶IIα和IIβ对高浓度的环丙沙星有一定反应。然而,尚不清楚这些研究中使用的环丙沙星浓度是否与患者常规可达到的浓度相对应。因此,本研究着手研究三种临床相关的氟喹诺酮类药物以及两种较老的药物,以确定这些化合物在更接近典型患者血浆值的药物浓度下是否对拓扑异构酶IIα和IIβ具有活性。根据我们的证据,所研究的喹诺酮类药物均不能使这两种人类酶的DNA切割中毒。环丙沙星、去乙基环丙沙星和最近已退市的吉米沙星在浓度为200 - 300μM时能够抑制拓扑异构酶II介导的DNA松弛。基于这些数据,我们认为人类拓扑异构酶II不太可能是这些不良事件的主要原因,需要确定其他靶点以阐明喹诺酮类药物毒性的潜在机制。