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Peptide derived from fungi kills TB bacteria

Illustration of fungi in a forest

Tuberculosis (TB) is the world’s most widespread infectious disease. Each year, close to two million people die of the disease and the number of antibiotic-resistant tuberculosis bacteria is increasing. There is a considerable need for alternatives to antibiotics. Researchers at Lund University in Sweden, and at Imperial College in UK, believe they have a new pharmaceutical candidate in their sights. They have found that the antimicrobial peptide NZX rapidly and effectively kills TB bacteria.

WATCH: How nature could provide alternatives to antibiotics

 

The discovery of the peptide as a possible future antibiotic was made when the researchers screened different antimicrobial peptides’ ability to prevent the growth of the tuberculosis bacteria Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The peptide they ended up with comes from a fairly common fungi - the ebony cup (Pseudoplectania nigrella)

Today’s cure for TB
are antibiotics, but the patients must often undergo several treatments over a long period. Antimicrobial peptides have emerged as interesting alternatives in the hunt for new drugs against this disease. Peptides are produced by all organisms, from plants to mammals. They act as nature’s own antibiotics, as they kill bacteria rapidly and could also act as antibiotics for humans.

Several
antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) were previously tested against tuberculosis bacteria without success, as they have either been toxic to human cells or not sufficiently stable.

The major advantage of AMPs is that bacteria find it more difficult to build up
a resistance to the peptides, as these have more mechanisms than antibiotics to kill bacteria. Another advantage is that there are AMPs that can reduce inflammation and thus prevent damage to tissue during the treatment.

“When we investigated different peptides, we found one called NZX that is not toxic to our cells, but kills tuberculosis bacteria even at low concentrations. The peptide could also prevent lung damage
during tuberculosis infection”, explains the research team manager Gabriela Godaly, senior lecturer at the Department of Laboratory Medicine at Lund University.

The study is mainly based on cell data, i.e. was carried out on human cells in vitro (in a test tube) and later verified in animal models using mice.

“Although it’s a big step from mice to humans, we have great hopes for future patient studies, as the verified results in the animal studies were so clear”, says Gabriela Godaly.

Even cases where TB can be treated
is a long and complicated process that involves several drugs. There may be a need for a two-year long treatment in the case of resistant tuberculosis bacteria.

“Despite the long treatment period, last year it was possible to save only 54 per cent of the patients who had antibiotic-resistant bacteria. So
, there is a strong need for alternative treatments to prevent the spread of the disease and to reduce the associated mortality”, says Gabriela Godaly.

If NZX is to fulfil its potential as a future antibiotic, the researchers will have to optimize its properties. They are studying how NZX works against tuberculosis bacteria in combination with current antibiotics (rifampicin, isoniazid, pyrazinamide, ethambutol and streptomycin) in the hope of shortening TB treatment.

“We could show that NZX acts against several clinical strains of tuberculosis bacteria. The therapeutic potential of the peptide is further supported in animal models in which NZX significantly reduced the volume of bacteria after only five days of treatment”, says Gabriela
Godaly, and continues:

“But as always, basic research requires further confirmatory studies before it’s possible to go on to clinical studies, but we definitely believe that our data on the NZX peptide are promising for future treatment against tuberculosis.”

Publication: A novel derivative of the fungal antimicrobial peptide plectasin is active against Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Contact:
Gabriela Godaly, senior lecturer, research team manager at the Department of Laboratory Medicine’s Division of Medical Microbiology at Lund University
+46 0733 381344
gabriela [dot] godaly [at] med [dot] lu [dot] se