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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, December 2003, p. 3694-3698, Vol. 47, No. 12
0066-4804/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.47.12.3694-3698.2003
Copyright © 2003, American
Society for
Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Effects of DQ-113, a New Quinolone, against Methicillin- and Vancomycin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus-Caused Hematogenous Pulmonary Infections in Mice
Yukihiro Kaneko,1 Katsunori Yanagihara,1,2* Yoshitsugu Miyazaki,1 Kazuhiro Tsukamoto,1,2 Yoichi Hirakata,1 Kazunori Tomono,1 Jun-ichi Kadota,1 Takayoshi Tashiro,1 Ikuo Murata,1,2 and Shigeru Kohno1,3
Second
Department of Internal
Medicine,1
Department of
Pharmacotherapeutics,2
Division of Molecular
& Clinical Microbiology, Department of Molecular
Microbiology & Immunology, Nagasaki
University Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Nagasaki,
Japan3
Received 16 July 2003/
Accepted 21 August 2003

ABSTRACT
We
compared the effects of DQ-113, a new quinolone, to those
of vancomycin
(VCM) and teicoplanin (TEIC) in murine models
of hematogenous pulmonary
infections caused by methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus
aureus (MRSA) and VCM-insensitive
S. aureus (VISA).
The
MICs of DQ-113, VCM, and TEIC for MRSA were 0.125, 1.0,
and 0.5
µg/ml, respectively; and those for VISA were 0.25,
8.0, and 8.0
µg/ml, respectively. Treatment with DQ-113
resulted in a
significant decrease in the number of viable bacteria
in the lungs of
the mice used in the MRSA infection model (counts
in mice treated with
DQ-113, VCM, and TEIC and control mice,
6.33 ± 0.22, 7.99
± 0.14, 7.36 ± 0.20,
and 8.47 ± 0.22
log
10 CFU/lung [mean ± standard
error of the
mean], respectively [
P < 0.01 for
the group
treated with DQ-113 compared with the group
treated with VCM
or TEIC or the untreated group]). Mice infected
with VISA were
pretreated with cyclophosphamide, and the survival rate
was
recorded daily for 10 days. At the end of this period, 90%
of
the DQ-113-treated mice were still alive, whereas only 45 to
55%
of the mice in the other three groups were still alive
(
P <
0.05 for the group treated with DQ-113 compared
with the group
treated with VCM or TEIC or the untreated group]).
DQ-113 also
significantly (
P < 0.05) reduced the
number of viable bacteria
in the lungs compared with those in the lungs
of the other three
groups (counts in mice treated with DQ-113, VCM, and
TEIC and
control mice, 5.76 ± 0.39, 7.33 ± 0.07, 6.90
±
0.21, and 7.44 ± 0.17 log
10 CFU/lung,
respectively).
Histopathological examination revealed milder
inflammatory changes
in DQ-113-treated mice than in the mice in the
other groups.
Of the antibiotics analyzed, the parameters of area under
the
concentration-time from 0 to 6 h (AUC
0-6)/MIC
and the time that
the AUC
0-6 exceeded the MIC were the
highest for DQ-113. Our
results suggest that DQ-113 is potent and
effective for the
treatment of hematogenous pulmonary infections caused
by MRSA
and VISA
strains.

INTRODUCTION
Methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) was first
identified
in the 1960s and was reported to colonize the
upper respiratory
tract and to cause severe infections, such as
pneumonia, pulmonary
abscesses, and septicemia. MRSA infection develops
mainly in
inpatients with risk factors related to health care
(
5), although
it has also
recently been described in the general population
(
1).
Glycopeptides, such
as vancomycin (VCM) and teicoplanin (TEIC),
are the most reliable
therapeutic agents against infections
caused by MRSA. However, the
first report of a Japanese patient
harboring an MRSA strain resistant
to VCM appeared in 1996
(
3).
Subsequent isolation
of several VCM-resistant
S. aureus (or
VCM-insensitive
S.
aureus [VISA]) strains from the United States,
France,
Korea, South Africa, and Brazil confirmed that the emergence
of VCM
resistance in
S. aureus is a global issue
(
9). Thus,
some new agents
with activities against MRSA and VISA, such
as linezolid, daptomycin,
and quinupristin-dalfopristin, have
been developed
(
6). Tanaka et al.
(
10) reported that
DQ-113,
a new quinolone-type antibacterial agent, showed potent in
vitro
activities against various bacteria, including multiple-resistant
strains,
such as MRSA, VISA, and penicillin-resistant
Streptococcus
pneumoniae.
It is expected that DQ-113 will be effective against
severe
staphylococcal infections, such as pneumonia, septicemia, and
pulmonary
abscesses.
A murine model of pulmonary infection with
S. aureus by intravenous injection of bacteria enmeshed in
agar beads was previously established
(8) to evaluate the
efficacies of antibiotics and the pathogenesis of blood-borne
staphylococcal pneumonia. In the present study, we used
the model to evaluate the antibacterial and histopathological effects
of DQ-113 against MRSA and VISA by comparing these effects with those
of VCM and TEIC.

MATERIALS AND
METHODS
Laboratory animals.
Six-week-old male
specific-pathogen-free ddY mice (body weight,
25 to 30 g)
were purchased from Shizuoka Agricultural Cooperative
Association
Laboratory Animals (Shizuoka, Japan). All animals
were housed in a
pathogen-free environment and received sterile
food and water ad
libitum in the Laboratory Animal Centre for
Biomedical Science at
Nagasaki University. The Ethics Review
Committee for Animal
Experimentation at our institution approved
in advance all experimental
protocols described in this
study.
Bacterial strain.
Two strains of S. aureus
were examined. Strain NUMR101 was isolated clinically at Nagasaki
University Hospital from blood samples of infected patients. Mu50, a
VCM-insensitive strain, was kindly provided by K. Hiramatsu (Juntendo
University, Tokyo, Japan)
(3). The bacteria were
stored at -70°C in brain heart infusion broth (BBL
Microbiology System, Cockeysville, Md.) supplemented with 10%
(vol/vol) glycerol and 5% (wt/vol) skim milk (Yukijirushi Co.,
Tokyo, Japan) until use.
MIC
determinations.
DQ-113
(Daiichi Pharmaceutical Co., Tokyo, Japan) was dissolved
in 0.01 N NaOH-2% glucose-1 mM
phosphate-buffered saline. VCM (Shionogi Pharmaceutical Co., Tokyo,
Japan) and TEIC (Aventis Pharmaceutical Co., Tokyo, Japan) were
dissolved in sterile water immediately before use. The MIC of each
agent was determined by the microplate dilution technique with
Mueller-Hinton medium and an inoculum of 5 x 105
CFU/ml. The MIC was defined as the lowest concentration of the test
drug that inhibited visible growth of the bacteria after 18 h
of incubation at
37°C.
Inoculum.
The method of inoculation was
described previously (8).
S. aureus was cultured on a Trypticase soy agar (BBL
Microbiology Systems)-based sheep blood agar plate for 24 h
at 37°C. The bacteria were suspended in endotoxin-free sterile
saline and harvested by centrifugation (3,000 x g,
4°C, 10 min). The microorganisms were resuspended in cold
sterile saline and diluted to 2 x 109 to 4 x
109 CFU/ml, as estimated by turbidimetry. The suspension was
warmed to 45°C, and then 10 ml of the suspension was mixed with
10 ml of 4% (wt/vol) molten Noble agar (Difco Laboratories,
Detroit, Mich.) at 45°C. The agar-bacterium suspension (1.0 ml)
was placed in a 1.0-ml syringe, and the suspension was rapidly injected
with a 26-gauge needle into 49 ml of rapidly stirred ice-cooled sterile
saline. This resulted in solidification of the agar droplets into beads
of approximately 200 µm in diameter. The final concentration of
agar was 0.04% (wt/vol), and the final number of bacteria was 2
x 107 to 4 x 107
CFU/ml.
Because of the low level of pathogenicity of Mu50, mice
infected with VISA were pretreated with cyclophosphamide (100 mg/kg) at
1 and 3 days before inoculation, and the survival rate was recorded
daily over a period of 10 days
(12).
Experimental
model.
We injected 0.20 to
0.25 ml of the agar beads that contained the bacteria and that were
suspended in saline into the tail vein of each mouse (10 ml/g of body
weight). Before the bacteria were enmeshed in the agar beads, we
verified their numbers by inoculating duplicates of serial dilutions
onto blood agar plates and counting the number of CFU after
48 h of incubation at 37°C. The method used to induce
infection has previously been described in detail
(8). Treatment commenced a
day after inoculation by intraperitoneal administration of antibiotics.
For the study with MRSA, 45 animals received one of the following eight
treatments: DQ-113 (40 mg/kg of body weight/day; n =
6), VCM (40, 80, or 160 mg/kg/day; n = 6 each), TEIC
(40, 80, or 160 mg/kg/day; n = 6, 5, and 5,
respectively), or no treatment (controls; n = 5). Each
drug was administered twice daily (every 12 h) for 7 days. We
also conducted a survival study and a bacteriological study with VISA.
Mice infected with VISA were pretreated with cyclophosphamide. In the
survival study, the mice were treated every 12 h with 40
mg/kg/day for 10 days (n = 20). In the
bacteriological study, 24 animals received one of the following four
treatments: DQ-113 (40 mg/kg/day; n = 6), VCM (40
mg/kg/day; n = 6), TEIC (40 mg/kg/day; n
= 6), or no treatment (controls; n = 6). We
investigated the number of viable bacteria in the lungs after 7 days of
treatment.
Bacteriological, survival,
and histopathological examinations.
Each group of animals was killed by
cervical dislocation at specific time intervals. After exsanguination,
the lungs were dissected and removed under aseptic conditions. The
organs used for bacteriological analyses were homogenized and cultured
quantitatively by serial dilution on blood agar plates. Lung tissue for
histological examination was fixed in 10% buffered formalin and
stained with hematoxylin-eosin.
Lung and
serum drug concentrations in mice.
The animals were killed by cervical
dislocation at 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2, 4, and 6 h after treatment.
Serum was separated after the blood had clotted. Four animals were used
for each group. The lungs were removed, washed briefly, and
cryohomogenized with saline. These samples were immediately frozen and
stored at -80°C for a few days until the assay was
performed. The concentration of DQ-113 was measured by the paper disk
(bioassay) method (4). The
test organism was Bacillus subtilis ATCC 6633. The
concentrations of VCM and TEIC were measured by fluorescence
polarization immunoassay
(7). Pharmacokinetic
parameters were calculated from the arithmetic mean concentrations in
serum and lung tissue.
Statistical
analysis.
Bacteriological
data were expressed as means ± standard errors of the means
(SEMs). Survival data were compared by plotting Kaplan-Meier curves.
Differences between groups were examined for statistical significance
by the unpaired t test for MRSA and the log-rank test for
VISA. A P value less than 0.05 denoted the presence of a
statistically significant
difference.

RESULTS
Therapeutic
effects of antibiotics.
Treatment with VCM (40 or 80 mg/kg/day)
did not reduce the number
of viable bacteria in the lungs relative to
the number in the
lungs of the controls (VCM at 40 mg/kg/day, 7.99
± 0.14
log
10 CFU/lung; VCM at 80 mg/kg/day, 8.15
± 0.18 log
10 CFU/lung; controls, 8.47 ± 0.22
log
10 CFU/lung [
n = 6,
6, and 5,
respectively]). Treatment with VCM (160 mg/kg/day)
or TEIC (40,
80, or 160 mg/kg/day) reduced the number of viable
bacteria in the
lungs relative to the number in the lungs of
the controls (VCM at 160
mg/kg/day, 7.15 ± 018 log
10 CFU/lung; TEIC at 40
mg/kg/day, 7.36 ± 0.20 log
10 CFU/lung;
TEIC at 80
mg/kg/day, 7.66 ± 0.18 log
10 CFU/lung; TEIC
at 160
mg/kg/day, 6.95 ± 0.27 log
10 CFU/lung
[
n = 6,
6, 5, and 5, respectively]). In
contrast, administration of
DQ-113 at 40 mg/kg/day resulted in a
significant decrease in
the number of viable bacteria compared with the
number in the
other groups (6.33 ± 0.22 log
10
CFU/lung [
n = 6] [
P <
0.05
versus the counts for the other groups]). The data are
representative
of those from three independent experiments. In the VISA
study,
90% of mice treated with DQ-113 were still alive at the
end
of the study, while the survival rates were only 45 to 55%
for
the other three groups (Fig.
1). The differences in survival
rates between the group treated with DQ-113
and the other three
groups were significant (
P < 0.05
for each comparison). The
data are representative of those from two
independent experiments.
DQ-113 also significantly (
P
< 0.05) reduced the number of
viable bacteria in the lungs
compared with the number in the
lungs of the other three groups (for
DQ-113, VCM, TEIC, and
the controls, 5.76 ± 0.39, 7.33
± 0.07, 6.90 ±
0.21, and 7.44 ± 0.17
log
10 CFU/lung, respectively [
n = 6
for each group]).
Histopathological
examination.
At 7 days after
treatment, microscopic examination of lung tissue
specimens of mice
infected with VISA Mu50 showed lung abscesses
consisting of a central
zone comprising a bacterial colony with
infiltration of acute
inflammatory cells (Fig.
2). Findings
for the mice treated with VCM (Fig.
2c) and TEIC (Fig.
2b) were
similar to those
for the control mice (Fig.
2a). DQ-113-treated
mice
(Fig.
2d) exhibited fewer
abscesses and milder inflammatory
processes relative to those for the
other groups.
Serum and lung DQ-113, VCM,
and TEIC concentrations in mice.
Figure
3a and
b shows the mean concentrations of DQ-113, VCM,
and TEIC in the sera and
lungs of the mice 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2,
4, and 6 h after
administration. These data are for MRSA-infected
mice, and each drug
was administered at 20 mg/kg once a day
after inoculation. The peak
concentrations of DQ-113, VCM, and
TEIC in serum were 1.30 ±
0.23, 20.46 ± 2.98,
and 60.40 ± 1.47 µg/ml,
respectively (mean ±
SEM;
n = 4). The peak
concentrations of DQ-113, VCM and TEIC
in lung tissue were 3.38
± 0.19, 15.51 ± 4.04,
and 3.18 ± 1.34
µg/ml, respectively (mean ±
SEM;
n =
4). Table
1 shows the pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic
parameters in the lung
tissues of mice with MRSA and VISA infections.
The MICs of DQ-113, VCM,
and TEIC for NUMR101 were 0.125, 1.0,
and 0.5 µg/ml,
respectively; and those for Mu50 were 0.25,
8.0, and 8.0 µg/ml,
respectively. Of the antibiotics analyzed,
the parameters of the area
under the concentration-time curve
from 0 to 6 h
(AUC
0-6)/MIC and the time that the AUC
0-6
exceeded
the MIC (AUC
0-6 > MIC)/MIC
(AUIC
0-6) were the highest for
DQ-113.

DISCUSSION
In the present study,
we were successful in inducing severe
pneumonia and lung abscesses in
VISA Mu50-infected immunocompromised
mice, resulting in the death of
60% of the mice at 10 days after
infection. While VCM and TEIC
had no effect on the survival
rate, DQ-113 protected the mice against
fatal pneumonia and
resulted in a significant reduction in the
mortality rate. VCM
and TEIC had insufficient effects in the model
because they
poorly penetrated lung tissue. VCM and TEIC were effective
in
a dose-dependent manner in the MRSA study.
In our model of
hematogenous pulmonary infection, the new oxazolidinone antimicrobial
linezolid significantly reduced the number of MRSA organisms and
improved the survival rates of mice infected with VISA compared to the
effects of VCM and TEIC
(12). Our present data
suggest that DQ-113 is a potent antimicrobial agent against VISA
infection as well as MRSA, similar to linezolid.
VCM-resistant
S. aureus was recently isolated in the United States.
In a study published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(2), the MICs of VCM,
TEIC, and oxacillin for VISA were >128, 32, and 16 mg/ml,
respectively. The isolate contained the vanA VCM resistance
gene from enterococci, which is consistent with the glycopeptide MIC
profiles
(2).
The
new oxazolidinone antimicrobial linezolid has been approved for use for
the treatment of infections caused by various gram-positive bacteria,
including MRSA and VCM-resistant enterococci. However, one MRSA strain
resistant to linezolid has already been isolated from a patient treated
with this agent for dialysis-associated peritonitis
(11). These reports
emphasize the need to develop antimicrobial agents potent against VISA.
The available in vitro data
(10) and the present
results suggest that DQ-113 is a promising and potent candidate. In the
pharmacokinetic study, the AUC/MIC and AUIC values for DQ-113 were the
highest of those for the antibiotics analyzed. A recent brief report
showed that DQ-113 accumulates at higher concentrations than other
quinolones, suggesting that both its high intracellular concentrations
and its inhibitory activities against target enzymes contribute to its
potent antibacterial activity (M. Tanaka, T. Akasaka, Y. Onodera, M.
Yoshihara, T. Takemura, and K. Sato, Abstr. 41st Intersci. Conf.
Antimicrob. Agents Chemother., abstr. 552, 2001).
In conclusion,
we have demonstrated in the present study that DQ-113, a novel
antibacterial quinolone, effectively reduced the number of bacteria in
MRSA and VISA hematogenous infection models and significantly improved
the rates of survival of immunocompromised mice infected with VISA
compared with the rates achieved with VCM and TEIC.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank F. G.
Issa for assistance with editing the
manuscript.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding
author. Mailing address: Second Department of Internal Medicine,
Nagasaki University School of Medicine, 1-7-1 Sakamoto, Nagasaki,
852-8501 Japan. Phone: 81-95-849-7276. Fax: 81-95-849-7285. E-mail:
kyana-ngs{at}umin.ac.jp.


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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, December 2003, p. 3694-3698, Vol. 47, No. 12
0066-4804/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.47.12.3694-3698.2003
Copyright © 2003, American
Society for
Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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