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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, September 2008, p. 3118-3126, Vol. 52, No. 9
0066-4804/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.00526-08
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Arik Makovitzki,2,
Anne Beauvais,3
Jean-Paul Latgé,3
Steffen Jung,1 and
Yechiel Shai2*
Department of Immunology,1 Department of Biological Chemistry, Weizmann Institute of Science, 76100 Rehovot, Israel,2 Unité des Aspergillus, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France3
Received 23 April 2008/ Returned for modification 28 May 2008/ Accepted 29 June 2008
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) ingest and kill resting conidia mainly through nonoxidative mechanisms, while neutrophils use oxygen-dependent mechanisms to attack hyphae germinating from conidia that escape M
surveillance (1, 8, 14). Pulmonary dendritic cells (DC) were reported to play a role in conidium/hypha internalization, transportation to the draining lymph nodes, and induction of local and peripheral Th cell reactivity to the fungus (3). The absence of these protective mechanisms in immunocompromised individuals allows conidia to germinate and invade the lung tissue (7). Invasive aspergillosis (IA) has become an increasing cause of morbidity and mortality in patients with AIDS or those undergoing allogeneic bone marrow transplantation, as well as intensive chemotherapy (1, 18, 19, 29, 31). Although newer drugs with activity against IA have reached the commercial market (4, 10), amphotericin B deoxycholate (D-AMB) is still used extensively for severe cases of IA (26). However, the reported toxicity of D-AMB remains a major concern (33). To reduce toxicity and increase dose delivery, AMB lipid formulations have been developed recently, such as liposomal AMB (L-AMB [AmBisome]) and AMB lipid complex (Abelcet) (2, 15, 30, 32). Corresponding preclinical studies revealed an increased antifungal activity. However, this activity correlated with increased drug levels in the tissues of mouse models of invasive fungal infection (6), which were toxic at doses within a limited range (5). Both drugs injected intravenously (12 mg/kg of body weight) were effective for prolonging survival, and the reduced nephrotoxicity observed with L-AMB allowed the therapeutic index to be increased (20). Using lipid formulations of AMB thus improved IA treatment. Nevertheless, the poor aqueous solubility and the toxicity toward host tissue remain unsolved issues. In addition, inhalation of aerosolized AMB is not well tolerated and is inefficient in preventing invasive pulmonary aspergillosis (IPA) in immunocompromised patients (9, 25). In this study, we selected an immunosuppressed murine model of pulmonary aspergillosis with which to investigate the effects of a new family of ultrashort antifungal lipopeptides on therapeutic efficacy. This family of de novo designed synthetic lipopeptides is composed of only four L and D amino acids linked to fatty acids that have a potent, broad spectrum of in vitro antimicrobial activity against human-pathogenic yeast, fungi, and bacteria. The sequence of the peptidic moiety and the length of the fatty acyl group determine the specificities of the lipopeptides against bacteria, fungi, and mammalian cells. Studies of their plausible modes of action support a membranolytic or detergent-like effect, probably via the carpet mechanism, that should make it difficult for the microorganisms to develop resistance (16). We found that one of the ultrashort lipopeptides exerts specific antifungal activity toward pathogenic A. fumigatus fungi in vivo and increases the life rate and survival of IPA model mice with low toxicity effects and no damage to the treated lung tissues. |
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Fungal strains. The A. fumigatus CBS 144.89 strain was a clinical isolate. These conidia were transformed by electroporation with the plasmids pAN7-1 and pPgpd-DsRed, harboring a hygB resistance gene and a DsRed gene, respectively (28). Resting DsRed conidia were harvested by washing a 4-day-old culture with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) supplemented with 0.1% Tween 20 (PBST) (Sigma-Aldrich). The suspension was filtered through a 40-µm cell strainer (Falcon) to separate DsRed conidia from contaminating mycelium and stored at 4°C. The DsRed conidium count was determined with a hemacytometer, and the DsRed conidium suspension was adjusted to the desired concentration by dilution in PBS.
Pulmonary challenge. Mice were immunosuppressed and challenged as previously described (22). Briefly, we injected intraperitoneally 25 mg of cortisone acetate (Sigma-Aldrich) diluted in PBS supplemented with 0.02% Tween 80 (Sigma-Aldrich) on days 0 and 3. Before mice were infected, they were anesthetized with isoflurane (Nicholas Piramal), and 107 DsRed conidia in 25 µl of PBST were inoculated intranasally on day 0, using a micropipettor. Control nonimmunosuppressed mice received the same conidial suspension. At day 4, an infection readout was carried out on fresh tissue sections isolated from inflated lungs with PBS containing agarose 1% supplemented, or not, with 0.1 µM 5- (and 6)-{[(4 chloromethyl)benzoyl]amino}tetramethylrhodamine (CMTMR; Molecular Probes), using a confocal Axioplan LSM 510 microscope (Zeiss).
Lipopeptide synthesis and purification. We synthesized lipopeptides composed of four amino acids linked to aliphatic acids with different lengths (28). The sequence of the peptidic moiety was KXXK (X here represents Leu [L], Ala [A], or Lys [K]). All of the peptides were amidated at their C termini, and one of their amino acids was replaced with the D-enantiomer. Lipopeptides were synthesized by a 9-fluorenylmethoxy carbonyl (Fmoc) solid phase method on Rink methylbenzhydrylamine (MBHA) salt resin, by using a 433A automatic peptide synthesizer unit (Applied Biosystems). Purification was performed by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (purity, >98%), and the lipopeptide composition was confirmed by electrospray mass spectroscopy and amino acid analysis.
Antifungal activity. The antifungal activity of lipopeptides was measured according to the conditions described in the National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards document M27-A (20a). The peptides were examined in sterile polystyrene 96-well plates (F96 microtest plates; Falcon) in a 200-µl volume of solution as follows: 100 µl of a suspension containing fungi at a concentration of 2 x 103 CFU/ml in culture medium (RPMI 1640 medium and 0.165 M morpholinepropanesulfonic acid [pH 7.4], with L-glutamine, without NaHCO3 medium) was added to 100 µl of PBS containing the peptide in serial twofold dilutions. The fungi were incubated for 24 h for DsRed A. fumigatus (CBS 144.89), using a Binder (Tuttingen) KB115 incubator. Growth inhibition was determined by measuring the absorbance at 620 nm in an El309 microplate autoreader (Biotek Instruments). Antifungal activities are expressed as the MICs, the concentration at which no growth was observed. Three independent serial dilution experiments were done, and the results were similar.
Intratracheal instillation. PBS (25 µl) only or PBS containing either lipopeptides or AMB (purity 80%; Sigma-Aldrich) was applied at the indicated doses to the trachea of mice, as previously described, with modifications (11). Briefly, mice were anesthetized using isoflurane (Nicholas Piramal) and placed vertically, and their tongues were pulled out of the way. Using a long nasal tip, liquid was placed at the top of the trachea and actively aspirated by the mouse.
Efficacy experiments. After they were infected, immunosuppressed mice were intratracheally treated every 24 h, from day 0 to day 3, with repeated doses of 4.5 mg/kg of lipopeptide. As controls, mice received no treatment or received AMB at 1 mg/kg (nontoxic dose, as shown in toxicological studies cited below) after infection or received DsRed conidia preincubated with lipopeptides at a dose of 4.5 mg/kg. At day 4, fresh lung tissue was isolated from inflated lungs with PBS containing agarose 1% and cut into sections that were observed using a confocal Axioplan LSM 510 microscope (Zeiss).
Survival analysis. In the first experiment, infected WT mice were intratracheally treated repeatedly every 24 h from day 0 to day 3 or once on day 1 with either lipopeptides at 4.5 mg/kg or with AMB at 1 mg/kg. Mice were followed for morbidity for 14 days postchallenge. In the second experiment, infected WT mice were intratracheally treated repeatedly on days 1, 4, 7, and 11 with lipopeptides at 4.5 mg/kg or with AMB at 1 mg/kg. Mice were followed for morbidity for 21 days postchallenge. As controls, infected immunocompetent and immunosuppressed mice were added to both experiments. Survival rates of the mice were analyzed for all of the treated groups (n = 8 mice per group). Two independent reproducible experiments were done. Lung tissues from each group were collected in the second experiment at the latest survival day along the challenge period. Tissues were fixed in 4% neutral buffered formalin, embedded in paraffin, and cut into 5-µm-thick sections. Sections were stained with periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) for fungal detection and examined microscopically (Olympus E800 microscope).
Evaluation of toxicity. Noninfected, immunosuppressed mice (n = 3 per group) received intratracheal PBS or lipopeptides at 4.5 mg/kg or AMB at 1 to 4.5 mg/kg on days 1, 4, 7, and 11. Lung tissues from each group were collected at 24 h after the last drug treatment. Tissues were fixed in 4% neutral buffered formalin, embedded in paraffin, and cut into 5-µm-thick sections. Sections were stained with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) and examined microscopically (Olympus E800) by a board-certified veterinary pathologist.
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TABLE 1. Antimicrobial MICs of the ultrashort lipopeptides
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and DC in the lungs, we used transgenic Cx3cr1gfp/+ mice that expressed GFP in lung DC (12, 13). The lung architecture was revealed by confocal microscopic analysis after CMTMR was injected into inflated lungs (Fig. 1A). GFP-positive DC were located mainly within the lung tissue, whereas autofluorescent M
were observed mostly within alveolar spaces. Four days after immunocompetent Cx3cr1gfp/+ mice were intranasally infected, DsRed conidia were phagocytosed by both M
and DC in the lungs, as shown by confocal microscopy (Fig. 1B). In immunosuppressed Cx3cr1gfp/+ mice, DsRed hyphal forms started to grow in the lungs (Fig. 1C and D) to further invade the tissue (Fig. 2E). When WT mice received four daily doses of C12-DL6K6, the hyphal forms observed on day 4 were partially degraded (Fig. 2B) compared to those observed with nontreated WT mice (Fig. 2A and C). Interestingly, the use of C16-KAAK, under the same conditions, provided more efficient degradation of hyphal forms (Fig. 2E) scattering red fluorescent spores than the use of AMB (Fig. 2D). Whereas large numbers of developed DsRed hyphal forms could be identified throughout the lungs in untreated control mice (Fig. 2F), only DsRed conidia phagocytosed mainly by macrophages could be identified in the C16-KAAK-treated WT or Cx3cr1gfp/+ mice (Fig. 2G and 3A, respectively). Closer examination of tissue at higher magnification revealed few residual fungi spores exclusively colocalized with M
and DC (Fig. 3B and C). Furthermore, this infection state was similar to the one obtained when DsRed conidia were incubated with C16-KAAK prior to infection (Fig. 2H). We therefore continued this study using only the C16-KAAK lipopeptide.
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FIG. 1. Ex vivo confocal imaging of cross sections of fresh lung tissue from CX3CR1GFP mice. (A) Lungs were injected with CMTMR to reveal tissue architecture. Mice were intranasally infected with 107 DsRed A. fumigatus conidia, and the course of infection was observed for immunocompetent mice at day 4 (B) and for immunosuppressed mice at day 4 (C and D) and at day 7 (E). (B) Examples of DsRed A. fumigatus phagocytosed by M and DC are indicated by the red arrows. Hyphal forms are observed starting on day 4 in immunosuppressed mice (C, D, and E). Scale bars = 10 µm.
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FIG. 2. Confocal microscopic analysis of the lungs of untreated or treated immunocompromised WT mice. Four days after mice were intranasally infected with DsRed A. fumigatus conidia, fresh lung sections were isolated from untreated (A, C, and F), C12-DL6K6-treated (B), C16-KAAK-treated (E and G), or AMB-treated (D) mice or mice infected with preincubated DsRed conidia with C16-KAAK (H). Whereas hyphae were partially degraded by C12-DL6K6 (B), C16-KAAK efficiently damaged hyphal forms (E), and only residual conidia were observed (G and H). Scale bars = 10 µm (A, C, F, G, and H) and 5 µm (B, D, and E).
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FIG. 3. Confocal microscopic analysis of the lungs of C16-KAAK-treated immunocompromised CX3CR1GFP mice. Four days after mice were intranasally infected with DsRed A. fumigatus conidia, fresh lung sections were isolated. Residual conidia were detected within both M (A and B) and DC (A and C). Scale bars = 10 µm (A) and 5 µm (B and C).
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FIG. 4. Survival of immunocompromised WT mice. In the first survival assay (A), mice were infected intranasally with DsRed A. fumigatus conidia and treated with vehicle control ( ) or with one dose of C16-KAAK at 4.5 mg/kg day after the infection ( ) or with four doses of C16-KAAK at 4.5 mg/kg every day from the day of the infection ( ) or with one dose of AMB at 1 mg/kg day after the infection (), or with four doses of AMB at 1 mg/kg every day from the day of the infection (–). Survival was followed over a period of 14 days. In the second survival assay (B), treatments were given on days 1, 4, 7, and 11, and survival was followed over a period of 21 days: vehicle control ( ), C16-KAAK at 4.5 mg/kg ( ), AMB at 1 mg/kg (). In both assays, infected immunocompetent mice served as a control ( ). Two independent reproducible experiments were done.
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FIG. 5. Fungus detection on lung sections of infected immunocompromised WT mice. Lungs of mice from each group of the second survival assay were isolated at the last survival day. Lung paraffin sections were stained with PAS. Focal lesions of IA were observed in both untreated (A and B) and AMB-treated (C) mice. Lung tissue of C16-KAAK-treated mice, at 21 days after infection, was cleared of fungal forms (D), and only a few damaged hyphae were found as indicated by the red arrow (E). Scale bars = 10 µm.
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FIG. 6. Toxicity in lungs of treated immunocompromised WT mice. H&E staining of a lung paraffin section after intratracheal injection of PBS (A), C16-KAAK at 4.5 mg/kg (C), or AMB at 1 mg/kg (B), 2 mg/kg (D), 3 mg/kg (E and F), and 4.5 mg/kg (G and H). Toxic effects were not detected in lungs injected with PBS or C16-KAAK but were detected in lungs injected only with doses of AMB ranging from 2 to 4.5 mg/kg. Scale bars = 10 µm.
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and DC on day 4 could be the origin of further invasive aspergillosis once the treatment is aborted. Therefore, increasing the lipopeptide dose could allow a better targeting of the conidia within mononuclear phagocytes in immunosuppressed mice, in which the clearance mechanism of M
is impaired. Moreover, we are currently testing this lipopeptide by using other fungi to determine the cross-range of killing activity. As reported in our previous study (16), the attachment of an aliphatic chain to otherwise very short, inert cationic peptides provides lower MICs than many native antimicrobial peptides and specificity toward different cell types. Importantly, most of these ultrashort lipopeptides show low hemolytic levels and several members offered both antibacterial and antifungal activity, as opposed to most known antimicrobial peptides or natural lipopeptides. Furthermore, the incorporation of D- amino acids could give these lipopeptides several advantages compared with their parental lipopeptides which contain all L- amino acids, such as controlled enzymatic degradation. Also, the in vivo prophylactic potential of this lipopeptide remains to be determined. In fact, the few trials that investigated prophylaxis against IA infections prospectively failed to demonstrate a benefit of any strategies, mainly due to toxicity issues (21, 23, 27). In addition, the goal of developing different formulations of AMB is to improve antifungal activity by increasing the antibiotic dose, which potentially raises the issue of resistance that may not be encountered using ultrashort lipopeptides that are naturally degraded in the body. Therefore, our results suggest that the use of the C16-KAAK lipopeptide could offer a more efficient treatment of IPA and opportunities toward other antifungal applications.
This study was supported by the Association of the Swiss Friends of the Weizmann Institute (to S.J.) and by a grant from the Conseil Pasteur-Weizmann (to Y.S.). Y.S. holds the Harold S. and Harriet B. Brady Professorial Chair in Cancer Research.
Published ahead of print on 7 July 2008. ![]()
These authors contributed equally to the study. ![]()
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