Swiss scientists have discovered that a natural product secreted by a soil bacterium may offer a new cure for drug-resistant tuberculosis.
Researchers from Switzerland found that pyridomycin, a natural antibiotic produced by the bacterium Dactylosporangium fulvum is active against many of the drug-resistant types of the tuberculosis bacterium that no longer respond to treatment with the front-line drug isoniazid.
“Nature and evolution have equipped some bacteria with potent defence mechanisms to protect them against other bugs that share their habitat. Screening natural products generated by these organisms is therefore a powerful way to find possible new drugs to fight infectious diseases,” Stewart Cole, lead author of the study, said.
“Using this approach we have shown that nature’s antibiotic pyridomycin is a very selective killer of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the bacterium responsible for tuberculosis in humans. It is also active against mycobacteria that have developed resistance to front-line drug treatments such as isoniazid,” Stewart Cole said in a statement.
The researchers also identified a protein, the enzyme NADH-dependent enoyl (acyl carrier protein) reductase or INHA, which is the principal target for the antibiotic.
“By selecting and isolating M tuberculosis mutants resistant to pyridomycin and sequencing their genome we have found that a single gene named INHA is responsible for resistance to this natural product,” added Stewart Cole.
The gene INHA is needed to produce the INHA protein, which is already known as a target for tuberculosis drug isoniazid.
It turns out that pyridomycin can bind to the same pocket on the INHA enzyme as isoniazid but at a different site and in a way that involves a different sequence of molecular events.
It is these differences that give pyridomycin the ability to overcome drug-resistant strains of mycobacteria.
“Our finding that pyridomycin kills Mycobacterium tuberculosis by inhibiting INHA, even in clinically isolated bacteria that are resistant to the drug isoniazid, provides a great opportunity to develop pyridomycin or a related agent for the treatment of drug-resistant tuberculosis,” Stewart Cole said.
The new study was published in EMBO Molecular Medicine.