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Antimicrobial resistance

By Dermot Garland - 04th Feb 2020

Cancer drug effective against multi-resistant bacteria

Antibiotic-resistant bacteria are increasingly the source of deadly infections. A team of scientists from the Technical University of Munich (TUM) and the Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research (HZI) in Braunschweig, Germany, have now modified an approved cancer drug to develop an active agent against multidrug-resistant pathogens. The methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is the source of severe and persistent infections. Some strains are even resistant to multiple antibiotics. There is consequently an urgent need for new drugs effective against MRSA infections.

“The industrial development of new antibiotics is stalling and not keeping pace with the spread of antibiotic resistance. We urgently need innovative approaches to meet the need for new infection therapies that do not lead directly to renewed resistance,” said
Prof Eva Medina, Director of the HZI Infection Immunology Research Group.

New antibiotic development strategies

One promising strategy is to test the potential effect of approved drugs on bacteria. “Our focus was on a class of human proteins, called kinases, which have many inhibitors to begin with,” explained study leader Prof Stephan Sieber, Professor of Organic Chemistry at TUM. In this vein, the researchers chemically modified the active ingredient sorafenib, a cancer drug that is effective against MRSA, to achieve a stronger antibiotic effect. This led to the development of PK150, a molecule 10 times more effective against MRSA than the original substance.

Multiple attacks prevent the development of resistance

The potent new agent targets various unconventional structures within the bacteria. Two targets were investigated in greater detail: For one, PK150 inhibits an essential protein involved in bacterial energy metabolism. For another, it acts on the cell wall.

In contrast to previously-known antibiotics such as penicillin and methicillin, which interfere with cell wall formation, PK150 acts indirectly. It knocks the protein production in bacteria off-kilter. As a result, the bacteria release more proteins that control the cell wall thickness to the outside, causing the cells to burst. In mice, PK150 has proven to be effective against MRSA in a variety of tissues. While staphylococci rapidly develop resistance to other antibiotics, the researchers did not observe the development of any resistance to PK150.

Effectiveness against biofilms and persisters

Ms Eva Medina and Dr Katharina Rox, a pharmacologist from the Department of Chemical Biology at HZI, showed that PK150 has favourable pharmacological properties. It can be administered as a tablet, for example, and remains stable in the body for several hours. “As a result of the chemical changes to the molecule, PK150 no longer binds to human kinases, but acts very specifically against bacterial targets,” said Prof Sieber. And PK 150 has another benefit: “MRSA infections are very often chronic, as the bacteria can become dormant. PK150 even kills these, as well as germs protected in biofilms,” said Prof Dietmar Pieper, head of the HZI research group ‘Microbial Interactions and Processes’.

In the context of the aBACTER project, Prof Sieber’s team is now further optimising PK150 to enter the clinical development phase. The study was titled ‘Repurposing human kinase inhibitors to create an antibiotic active against drug-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, persisters and biofilms’.

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