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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, May 2008, p. 1837-1839, Vol. 52, No. 5
0066-4804/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.01454-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Buthionine Sulfoximine Has Anti-Trypanosoma cruzi Activity in a Murine Model of Acute Chagas' Disease and Enhances the Efficacy of Nifurtimox
Mario Faúndez,1,3
Rodrigo López-Muñoz,1
Gloria Torres,1
Antonio Morello,1
Jorge Ferreira,1
Ulrike Kemmerling,2
Myriam Orellana,1 and
Juan D. Maya1*
Program of Molecular and Clinical Pharmacology, ICBM, Faculty of Medicine, University of Chile, Santiago, Chile,1
Program of Anatomy and Developmental Biology, ICBM, Faculty of Medicine, University of Chile, Santiago, Chile,2
Facultad de Farmacia, Universidad de Valparaíso, Valparaíso, Chile3
Received 8 November 2007/
Returned for modification 15 December 2007/
Accepted 6 February 2008

ABSTRACT
L-Buthionine (
S,
R)-sulfoximine (BSO) at a dose of 220 mg/kg
of body weight/day showed an anti-
Trypanosoma cruzi effect in
infected mice, increasing their survival rate and decreasing
the parasitemias and parasite burden in the hearts. Treatment
with BSO plus nifurtimox caused an increase in the survival
rate in comparison to the rates with treatment with each drug
alone.

TEXT
Chagas' disease is a clinical condition caused by
Trypanosoma cruzi. The limited success and side-effect liabilities of Chagas'
disease therapy have led to a continued search for new antitrypanosomal
treatments (
16,
17).
The currently used drugs are nifurtimox (Nx) and benznidazole, which act through the formation of free radicals and electrophilic metabolites, respectively (12, 14). Both drugs are trypanocidal against all forms of the parasite (16).
Aerobic organisms, such as Trypanosoma cruzi, are exposed to reactive oxygen species generated by their metabolism. T. cruzi cells have to handle their endogenously produced reactive oxygen species and also cope with the oxidative burst delivered by the host's immune system and the free radicals and electrophilic metabolites generated by the antichagasic drugs (2, 12, 15).
The redox metabolism of trypanosomatids is based on a bis-glutathionylspermidine conjugate, trypanothione, and on the flavoenzyme trypanothione reductase (1, 15).
Trypanothione is synthesized by an ATP-dependent reaction catalyzed by trypanothione synthetase using the tripeptide glutathione (GSH) and the polyamine spermidine as substrates. GSH synthesis involves two ATP-requiring enzymes. The first is
-glutamylcysteine synthetase and is the rate-limiting step (10). The second is GSH synthetase. GSH synthesis is regulated primarily through
-glutamylcysteine synthetase by cysteine availability and GSH feedback inhibition (10).
The glutamate analog L-buthionine (S,R)-sulfoximine (BSO) inhibits the synthesis of glutathionylcysteine and, thus, of GSH and trypanothione. The results of a previous report indicate that BSO increased the effects of Nx and benznidazole in an in vitro model of Chagas' disease (7).
In agreement with the results of a previous report (9), a significant decrease in GSH content in liver, heart, blood, and kidney in BALB/c mice treated intraperitoneally with 220 mg/kg of body weight/day of BSO (Fig. 1) was observed after 20 days of treatment. The BSO treatment did not show toxic effect. The concentration of GSH was determined by high-pressure liquid chromatography separation and quantification of monobromobimane derivatives (6, 13). In the host, BSO can decrease GSH levels (Fig. 1), but mammalian cells exert several efficient GSH-independent antioxidant mechanisms (3).
Figure
2 shows the effect of BSO upon mice infected with 30,000
T. cruzi metacyclic trypomastigotes of clone Dm 28c. A dose
of 220 mg/kg/day of BSO during 20 days significantly increased
the survival rate of the mice, from 25% to 80% (Fig.
2A). The
Kaplan-Meier nonparametric method was used to estimate the survival
functions of the different experimental groups. Rank tests (log
rank) were used to compare them (
P = 0.0199). Figure
2B shows
a significant decrease in parasitemias (
P value of <0.0001
by two-way analysis of variance and Bonferroni's posttest).
Figure
2C shows the decrease in parasite burden in the hearts
of infected mice, dyed with hematoxylin and eosin stain. BSO
at 30 mg/kg/day had no significant effect on the survival rate,
parasitemia, or parasite burden in treated mice in comparison
to those in control mice. Survival with a 440-mg/kg/day dose
of BSO showed a difference from survival with 220 mg/kg/day,
but this was not significant, most probably because the effects
were close to the maximum possible survival. The data shown
in Fig.
2 are the results of at least three independent experiments.
Figure
3 shows the effects of BSO in combination with Nx on
T. cruzi-infected mice. Doses of 0.1 to 10 mg/kg/day of Nx were
tested in survival assays. The 2.5-mg/kg/day dose was chosen
because mice treated with that dose showed a moderate decrease
in survival (25%). In contrast, mice treated with 10 mg/kg/day
of Nx showed 100% survival rates, masking any enhancing effect
in the BSO combination. Figure
3A shows that Nx at a dose of
2.5 mg/kg/day had no significant effect on survival compared
to the survival of controls (
P = 0.3589). Mice treated with
BSO showed a significant difference in survival rate compared
with the survival rate of controls (
P = 0.0407), and mice treated
with Nx plus BSO showed a significant difference in survival
rate compared with the survival rates of controls (
P = 0.0002),
of mice treated with Nx alone (
P = 0.0043), and of mice treated
with BSO alone (
P = 0.0467), indicating an increase in the survival
rate when the two drugs are used in combination. When parasitemia
data were analyzed by two-way analysis of variance and Bonferroni's
posttest, it was observed that Nx at 2.5 mg/kg/day had a significant
effect on parasitemia compared with the parasitemia in the control
mice (
P < 0.0001), contrary to the negative result for the
survival rate. Mice treated with BSO alone and BSO plus Nx had
significant decreases in parasitemia compared with the parasitemia
in the control mice (
P < 0.0001); also, treatment with BSO
plus Nx decreased parasitemia significantly compared to treatment
with Nx (
P < 0.001). Nevertheless, there were differences
between the results of treatment with BSO and with BSO plus
Nx (
P < 0.0001) at days 14 and 16 (Fig.
3B). Figure
3C shows
the decrease in parasite burden in the hearts of infected mice,
dyed with hematoxylin and eosin stain, that were treated with
BSO plus Nx compared with the burden in hearts of mice treated
with Nx alone and that in untreated controls (Fig.
2C). All
images of parasite burdens in hearts are photographs representative
of three random slices each of heart tissue from at least three
surviving mice for each experimental condition.
Mice infected with
Trypanosoma brucei brucei have been cured
with BSO alone (
2). Similar approaches with an in vitro model
using megazol in
T. brucei (
4) and
Leishmania infections have
been reported (
11).
In humans, the BSO-GSH synthesis inhibition strategy used to overcome resistance and to potentiate the effect of antineoplastic agents, such as doxorubicin, melphalan, or cyclophosphamide, has been successful. In phase I trials, the concentration of BSO in blood reached 0.5 to 1 mM, reducing by 80% the GSH level in white blood cells (5).
BSO alone shows an important trypanocidal effect (Fig. 2A, B, and C), which may be explained by higher thiol decreases in the parasites than in the host.
In addition, BSO increases the effect of Nx on survival of treated mice (Fig. 3A), but BSO plus Nx did not show a significant modification of parasitemia in comparison to the parasitemia with BSO alone (Fig. 3B). The same effect was observed for the heart parasitic burden (not shown).
Our studies suggest that the use of BSO alone or in combination with Nx could lower the dose of the drug needed to obtain the same clinical effect and, consequently, should diminish its side effects and/or the duration of therapy. Nevertheless, the decrease of thiol groups in the host might increase the mutagenic effects of Nx (8).

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We acknowledge the critical review of this paper by Bruce Cassels
from the Faculty of Sciences, University of Chile.
FONDECYT-Chile, grant 1061072, and Proyecto Bicentenario Anillo, grant ACT29, supported this research.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: University of Chile, Faculty of Medicine, Molecular and Clinical Pharmacology Program, P.O. Box 70000, Santiago 7, Chile. Phone: (562) 9786071. Fax: (562) 7355580. E-mail:
jmaya{at}med.uchile.cl 
Published ahead of print on 10 March 2008. 

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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, May 2008, p. 1837-1839, Vol. 52, No. 5
0066-4804/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.01454-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.