A d-octapeptide drug efflux pump inhibitor acts synergistically with azoles in a murine oral candidiasis infection model

作者:Hayama Kazumi*; Ishibashi Hiroko; Ishijima Sanae A; Niimi Kyoko; Tansho Shigeru; Ono Yasuo; Monk Brian C; Holmes Ann R; Harding David R K; Cannon Richard D; Abe Shigeru
来源:FEMS Microbiology Letters, 2012, 328(2): 130-137.
DOI:10.1111/j.1574-6968.2011.02490.x

摘要

Clinical management of patients undergoing treatment of oropharyngeal candidiasis with azole antifungals can be impaired by azole resistance. High-level azole resistance is often caused by the overexpression of Candida albicans efflux pump Cdr1p. Inhibition of this pump therefore represents a target for combination therapies that reverse azole resistance. We assessed the therapeutic potential of the d-octapeptide derivative RC21v3, a Cdr1p inhibitor, in the treatment of murine oral candidiasis caused by either the azole-resistant C. albicans clinical isolate MML611 or its azole-susceptible parental strain MML610. RC21v3, fluconazole (FLC), or a combination of both drugs were administered orally to immunosuppressed ICR mice at 3, 24, and 27h after oral inoculation with C. albicans. FLC protected the mice inoculated with MML610 from oral candidiasis, but was only partially effective in MML611-infected mice. The co-application of RC21v3 (0.02 mu mol per dose) potentiated the therapeutic performance of FLC for mice infected with either strain. It caused a statistically significant decrease in C.albicans cfu isolated from the oral cavity of the infected mice and reduced oral lesions. RC21v3 also enhanced the therapeutic activity of itraconazole against MML611 infection. These results indicate that RC21v3 in combination with azoles has potential as a therapy against azole-resistant oral candidiasis.