Perchlozone Resistance in Clinical Isolates of Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Antibiotics (Basel). 2023 Mar 15;12(3):590. doi: 10.3390/antibiotics12030590.

Abstract

The emergence of drug-resistant tuberculosis forced the development of new drugs and the screening of more effective or less toxic analogues. Mycolic acid biosynthesis is targeted by several antituberculosis drugs, isoniazid being one of the most important in tuberculosis therapy. Recently, perchlozone, acting on another step in the FAS-II cycle, was officially approved for tuberculosis treatment in the Russian Federation and was included in the Russian national clinical guidelines. Using the serial dilution method on 7H10 agar plates for perchlozone and a Sensititre MYCOTB microdilution plate, we analyzed the phenotypic properties of primary clinical isolates of M. tuberculosis and analyzed the molecular determinants of resistance to isoniazid, ethionamide, and perchlozone. We found a wide variation in the MIC of perchlozone from 2 to 64 mg/L, correlating with the overall resistance profile: the MIC was higher for MDR and pre-XDR isolates. The cross-resistance between ethionamide and perchlozone was driven by mutations in the ethA gene encoding monooxygenase responsible for the activation of both drugs. The presumably susceptible to perchlozone and wild-type strains had MICs ranging from 2 to 4 mg/L, and the breakpoint was estimated to be 4 or 8 mg/L. In conclusion, susceptibility to perchlozone is retained for a part of the MDR strains, as is susceptibility to ethionamide, providing the possibility of therapy for such cases based on phenotypic or molecular analysis.

Keywords: drug resistance; ethionamide; isoniazid; molecular determinants; perchlozone; thioacetozone; tuberculosis.