Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, volume 69, issue 1

Contribution of telacebec to novel drug regimens in a murine tuberculosis model

Oliver D. Komm 1
Sandeep Tyagi 1
Andrew Garcia 1
Deepak Almeida 1
Chang Yong 1
Si-yang LI 1
Jennie Ruelas Castillo 1
Paul J. Converse 1
Todd Black 2
Nader Fotouhi 2
Eric L. &NA; 1
Show full list: 11 authors
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2025-01-31
scimago Q1
SJR1.357
CiteScore10.0
Impact factor4.1
ISSN00664804, 10986596
PubMed ID:  39651910
Abstract
ABSTRACT

The clinical efficacy of combination drug regimens containing the first-generation diarylquinoline (DARQ) bedaquiline in the treatment of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis has validated ATP synthesis as a vulnerable pathway in Mycobacterium tuberculosis . New DARQs in clinical development may be even more effective than bedaquiline, including against emerging bedaquiline-resistant strains. Telacebec (T) is a novel cytochrome bc 1 :aa 3 oxidase inhibitor that also inhibits ATP synthesis. Based on its demonstrated efficacy as a monotherapy in mice and in a phase 2a clinical trial, we tested the contribution of T to novel combination therapies against two strains of M. tuberculosis (H37Rv and HN878) in an established BALB/c mouse model of tuberculosis in an effort to find more effective regimens. Overall, T was more effective in regimens against the HN878 strain than against the H37Rv strain, a finding supported by the greater vulnerability of the former strain to T and to genetic depletion of QcrB. Against both strains, combinations of a DARQ, clofazimine, and T were highly bactericidal. However, only against HN878 did T contribute synergistically, whereas an antagonistic effect was observed against H37Rv. These results demonstrate the therapeutic potential of T and highlight how differences in the susceptibility of M. tuberculosis strains could lead to different conclusions about a drug’s potential contribution to novel drug regimens.

CLINICAL TRIALS

This study is registered with Clinicaltrials.gov as NCT04890535 and NCT06058299 .

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