Pantothenate and pantetheine antagonize the antitubercular activity of pyrazinamide.

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Citation

Dillon NA, Peterson ND, Rosen BC, Baughn AD

Pantothenate and pantetheine antagonize the antitubercular activity of pyrazinamide.

Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2014 Dec;58(12):7258-63. doi: 10.1128/AAC.04028-14. Epub 2014 Sep 22.

PubMed ID
25246400 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Pyrazinamide (PZA) is a first-line tuberculosis drug that inhibits the growth of Mycobacterium tuberculosis via an as yet undefined mechanism. An M. tuberculosis laboratory strain that was auxotrophic for pantothenate was found to be insensitive to PZA and to the active form, pyrazinoic acid (POA). To determine whether this phenotype was strain or condition specific, the effect of pantothenate supplementation on PZA activity was assessed using prototrophic strains of M. tuberculosis. It was found that pantothenate and other beta-alanine-containing metabolites abolished PZA and POA susceptibility, suggesting that POA might selectively target pantothenate synthesis. However, when the pantothenate-auxotrophic strain was cultivated using a subantagonistic concentration of pantetheine in lieu of pantothenate, susceptibility to PZA and POA was restored. In addition, we found that beta-alanine could not antagonize PZA and POA activity against the pantothenate-auxotrophic strain, indicating that the antagonism is specific to pantothenate. Moreover, pantothenate-mediated antagonism was observed for structurally related compounds, including n-propyl pyrazinoate, 5-chloropyrazinamide, and nicotinamide, but not for nicotinic acid or isoniazid. Taken together, these data demonstrate that while pantothenate can interfere with the action of PZA, pantothenate synthesis is not directly targeted by PZA. Our findings suggest that targeting of pantothenate synthesis has the potential to enhance PZA efficacy and possibly to restore PZA susceptibility in isolates with panD-linked resistance.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Pantothenate synthetaseP9WIL5Details