Journal article

Orientia tsutsugamushi Is Highly Susceptible to the RNA Polymerase Switch Region Inhibitor Corallopyronin A In Vitro and In Vivo


Authors listKock, F; Hauptmann, M; Osterloh, A; Schäberle, TF; Poppert, S; Frickmann, H; Menzel, KD; Peschel, G; Pfarr, K; Schiefer, A; König, GM; Hoerauf, A; Fleischer, B; Keller, C

Publication year2018

Pagese01732-17-

JournalAntimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy

Volume number62

Issue number4

ISSN0066-4804

Open access statusGreen

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1128/AAC.01732-17

PublisherAmerican Society for Microbiology


Abstract
Scrub typhus is a potentially lethal infection caused by the obligate intracellular bacterium Orientia tsutsugamushi. Reports on the emergence of doxycycline-resistant strains highlight the urgent need to develop novel antiinfectives against scrub typhus. Corallopyronin A (CorA) is a novel alpha-pyrone compound synthesized by the myxobacterium Corallococcus coralloides that was characterized as a noncompetitive inhibitor of the switch region of the bacterial RNA polymerase (RNAP). We investigated the antimicrobial action of CorA against the human-pathogenic Karp strain of O. tsutsugamushi in vitro and in vivo. The MIC of CorA against O. tsutsugamushi was remarkably low (0.0078 mu g/ml), 16-fold lower than that against Rickettsia typhi. In the lethal intraperitoneal O. tsutsugamushi mouse infection model, a minimum daily dose of 100 mu g CorA protected 100% of infected mice. Two days of treatment were sufficient to confer protection. In contrast to BALB/c mice, SCID mice succumbed to the infection despite treatment with CorA or tetracycline, suggesting that antimicrobial treatment required synergistic action of the adaptive immune response. Similar to tetracycline, CorA did not prevent latent infection of O. tsutsugamushi in vivo. However, latency was not caused by acquisition of antimicrobial resistance, since O. tsutsugamushi reisolated from latently infected BALB/c mice remained fully susceptible to CorA. No mutations were found in the CorA-binding regions of the beta and beta' RNAP subunit genes rpoB and rpoC. Inhibition of the RNAP switch region of O. tsutsugamushi by CorA is therefore a novel and highly potent target for antimicrobial therapy for scrub typhus.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleKock, F., Hauptmann, M., Osterloh, A., Schäberle, T., Poppert, S., Frickmann, H., et al. (2018) Orientia tsutsugamushi Is Highly Susceptible to the RNA Polymerase Switch Region Inhibitor Corallopyronin A In Vitro and In Vivo, Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, 62(4), p. e01732-17. https://doi.org/10.1128/AAC.01732-17

APA Citation styleKock, F., Hauptmann, M., Osterloh, A., Schäberle, T., Poppert, S., Frickmann, H., Menzel, K., Peschel, G., Pfarr, K., Schiefer, A., König, G., Hoerauf, A., Fleischer, B., & Keller, C. (2018). Orientia tsutsugamushi Is Highly Susceptible to the RNA Polymerase Switch Region Inhibitor Corallopyronin A In Vitro and In Vivo. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy. 62(4), e01732-17. https://doi.org/10.1128/AAC.01732-17


Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 10:51