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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, September 2005, p. 3922-3925, Vol. 49, No. 9
0066-4804/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.49.9.3922-3925.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Targeting of the Virulence Factor Acetohydroxyacid Synthase by Sulfonylureas Results in Inhibition of Intramacrophagic Multiplication of Brucella suis
Rose-Anne Boigegrain,
Jean-Pierre Liautard, and
Stephan Köhler*
Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale U-431, Université Montpellier II, Pl. E. Bataillon, 34095 Montpellier, France
Received 26 January 2005/
Returned for modification 21 March 2005/
Accepted 2 June 2005

ABSTRACT
The acetohydroxyacid synthase (AHAS) of
Brucella suis can be
effectively targeted by the sulfonylureas chlorimuron ethyl
and metsulfuron methyl. Growth in minimal medium was inhibited,
and multiplication in human macrophages was totally abolished
with 100 µM of sulfonylureas. Metsulfuron methyl-resistant
mutants showed reduced viability in macrophages and reduced
AHAS activity.

TEXT
Bacterial pathogens are generally sensitive to antibiotics.
However, a constantly increasing number of drug-resistant strains
are isolated (
17). The need to identify alternative bacterial
targets for antibacterial drugs is therefore evident. In intracellular
bacteria, pathogenicity is linked to the capacity to multiply
within the host cell, and we reasoned that antibacterials specifically
active at the intracellular state would block multiplication
of the bacteria without affecting extracellular bacteria, decreasing
pressure for the selection of resistant mutants and reducing
the probability of affecting the commensal flora. In this study
we demonstrate the usefulness of this approach with the example
of
Brucella spp. This intracellular pathogen infects animals
and humans, and brucellosis is considered a major zoonosis (
4).
Human brucellosis may become chronic, eventually causing death.
The genes required for intramacrophagic replication of
Brucella are a subset of the virulence genes of the pathogen (
5) and
were called the intramacrophagic virulome (
11). Among those
genes, we identified
ilv (BR1389 and BR1388 loci) (
15), which
encodes the acetohydroxyacid synthase (AHAS), as a potential
antimicrobial target. It participates in the biosynthesis of
isoleucine, leucine, and valine; and its importance in virulence,
together with other amino acid biosynthesis enzymes, led us
to conclude that the
Brucella-containing vacuole is nutrient
poor (
11,
12). AHAS has been studied in a wide range of organisms
such as
Escherichia coli,
Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and
Arabidopsis thaliana (
3,
10,
13,
16). Its activity is inhibited by sulfonylureas,
which show very low toxicity for mammals (
6). In this study,
the effects of sulfonylureas on brucellae were investigated.
Brucella suis 1330 (ATCC 23444), used throughout the study,
was grown in complex tryptic soy (TS) broth or in minimal medium
(
8). An AHAS-specific colorimetric assay was performed with
Brucella lysates according to established protocols (
7,
10).
Macrophage infection experiments were performed as described
previously (
2) by using human macrophage-like THP-1 cells. Spontaneously
metsulfuron methyl (MSM)-resistant mutants of
B. suis were isolated
after 8 days from MSM-containing minimal medium (10 µM),
followed by plating on the same solid medium.
Sulfonylureas inhibit AHAS activity in B. suis and growth in minimal medium.
Chlorimuron ethyl (CE) and MSM were the sulfonylureas that were the most effective in blocking AHAS activity in B. suis, with CE being more active (Fig. 1). As expected, the ilvI::Tn5 mutant did not grow in a minimal medium that mimicked the presumably nutrient-poor Brucella-containing vacuole in the macrophage, and wild-type brucellae lost their growth capacities in the presence of the sulfonylureas (Fig. 2A). The MICs were 1 µM for CE and 10 µM for MSM. Concentrations of 10 µM for CE and 100 µM for both sulfonylureas resulted in slightly decreased viabilities of the bacteria, probably due to the beginning of death by starvation (Fig. 2B). Growth in tryptic soy broth containing sulfonylureas, however, was not affected (data not shown).
Replication of intramacrophagic B. suis is inhibited by sulfonylureas.
We described for the first time that intramacrophagic growth
of an intracellular pathogen was inhibited in the presence of
the AHAS inhibitors MSM and CE (Fig.
3), confirming indirectly
that the
Brucella-containing vacuole is nutrient poor. Macrophage
infection experiments showed that in the presence of 100 µM
of sulfonylureas, the number of viable intracellular bacteria
at 48 h postinfection was identical to or less than the number
present at 90 min, whereas the pathogen multiplied 10
3-fold
without inhibitor (Fig.
3A). At concentrations of 1 and 10 µM,
the MSM inhibitor led to 8- and 32-fold reductions in intramacrophagic
multiplication of
Brucella, respectively (Fig.
3B), and the
CE inhibitor led to 6- and 50-fold reductions in replication,
respectively (data not shown), compared to the growth of untreated
cells at 48 h. Statistical analyses were performed by applying
Student's
t test. At 24 and 48 h, the differences between untreated
and MSM- or CE-treated cells were always significant. A toxic
effect of both sulfonylureas on the macrophages was excluded
by trypan blue staining at 48 h postinfection (data not shown).
Inhibition of bacterial growth in minimal medium and intracellularly
signified that these sulfonylureas crossed both the bacterial
and the macrophage membranes. Optimization of the inhibitors
with respect to their membrane-crossing capacities is in progress
to reduce the concentrations that are efficacious intracellularly.
B. suis mutants resistant to sulfonylureas are disadvantaged in the macrophage.
One potential advantage of these compounds over classical antimicrobials
may be a lower apparent mutation rate among the bacteria exposed
to sulfonylureas within the host: selective pressure occurs
only under starvation conditions, i.e., inside the host cell,
whereas the mode of action of antimicrobials is to exert a permanent
selective pressure on the microorganism, and they cause damage
to the bacterial flora of the gastrointestinal tract. We compared
the appearance of spontaneously sulfonylurea-resistant mutants
in rich broth (TS broth) in the absence or presence of 10 µM
MSM and in MSM-containing minimal medium (10 µM). The
mutation rate was 10
9 in rich medium whether MSM was
present or not, whereas it was as high as 10
6 under selective
conditions. We deduced from these results that in a nutrient-rich
environment, exposure to sulfonylureas did not favor the selection
of resistant mutants. Evidence that sulfonylurea resistance
was linked to mutations of the active site of AHAS (
14) raised
the question of whether MSM-resistant mutants are characterized
by a reduced fitness in the macrophage. In our macrophage model
of infection (
2), the behaviors of three randomly chosen mutants
isolated as described above were studied under nonselective
conditions. At 24 h postinfection, the rate of survival of the
three intracellular mutants was significantly lower than the
rate of survival of the wild-type strain (Fig.
4A). Measurement
of AHAS activity (
7,
10) in the wild type and the same three
MSM-resistant mutants yielded significantly reduced activities
in all mutants (Fig.
4B) and confirmed the absence of enzymatic
activity in the original
ilvI::Tn
5 mutant (
11). Sulfonylurea-resistant
mutants appearing in the host cell during treatment were therefore
disadvantaged in their adaptation to the intracellular environment,
showing the self-limiting effect of these mutations.
Conclusions.
The virulence factors of intracellular bacteria may be useful
targets in the development of antibacterials that specifically
suppress the intracellular replication of the pathogen. We validated
this approach by intramacrophagic virulome analysis of
B. suis (
11). Several amino acid biosynthesis pathways are absent from
mammals; and the enzymes involved in these pathways, including
AHAS, are sensitive to sulfonylureas (
6) and therefore represent
potential targets. AHAS has also been suggested as a target
for antituberculosis drugs (
1,
9), although
Mycobacterium replication
in macrophages in the presence of sulfonylureas has not been
addressed. Definition of the targets for antibacterials by intramacrophagic
virulome analysis limited the selective pressure to the intracellular
niche; in contrast, the constant selective pressure of classical
antimicrobials favors the rapid development of resistant mutants.
Brucellae resistant to MSM were characterized by reduced AHAS
activity and by intramacrophagic attenuation of the bacteria,
allowing us to speculate that the fitness of the pathogen inside
its niche may be reduced due to the suboptimal activity of this
enzyme. This argues in favor of the development of alternative
agents for the treatment of infections, as the appearance and
consequences of resistance may be limited in comparison to those
described for classical antibiotics. The identification of factors
required for adaptation of pathogens to their respective intracellular
environments may allow the development of antibacterials active
on conserved targets of various pathogens.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The sulfonylureas described in this study were a kind gift from
Dupont France.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: INSERM U-431, Université Montpellier II, CC 100, Place E. Bataillon, F-34095 Montpellier, France. Phone: 33 4 67 14 42 38. Fax: 33 4 67 14 33 38. E-mail:
kohler{at}univ-montp2.fr.


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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, September 2005, p. 3922-3925, Vol. 49, No. 9
0066-4804/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.49.9.3922-3925.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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