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      Minocycline Immunomodulates via Sonic Hedgehog Signaling and Apoptosis and Has Direct Potency Against Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis.

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          Abstract

          Drug-resistant tuberculosis represents a global emergency, requiring new drugs. We found that minocycline was highly potent in laboratory strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and that 30 drug-susceptible and multidrug/extensively drug-resistant clinical strains were susceptible to clinically achievable concentrations. In the hollow fiber system model, lung concentration-time profiles of 7 mg/kg/day human-equivalent minocycline dose achieved bacterial kill rates equivalent to those of first-line antituberculosis agents. Minocycline killed extracellular bacilli directly. Minocycline also killed intracellular bacilli indirectly, via concentration-dependent granzyme A-driven apoptosis. Moreover, minocycline demonstrated dose-dependent antiinflammatory activity and downregulation of extracellular matrix-based remodeling pathways and, thus, could protect patients from tuberculosis immunopathology. In RNA sequencing of repetitive samples from the hollow fiber system and in independent protein abundance experiments, minocycline demonstrated dose-dependent inhibition of sonic hedgehog-patched-gli signaling. These findings have implications for improved lung remodeling and for dual immunomodulation and direct microbial kill-based treatment shortening regimens for drug-susceptible and drug-resistant latent and active M. tuberculosis infection.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J. Infect. Dis.
          The Journal of infectious diseases
          Oxford University Press (OUP)
          1537-6613
          0022-1899
          February 23 2019
          : 219
          : 6
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Center for Infectious Diseases Research and Experimental Therapeutics, Baylor Research Institute, Dallas, Texas.
          [2 ] Division of Pulmonology, Centre for Lung Infection and Immunity, University of Cape Town Lung Institute, South Africa.
          Article
          5263980
          10.1093/infdis/jiy587
          30597040
          1edde9b0-52c4-494a-9ea8-1262d52b4969
          History

          PTCH1,Smac/DIABLO,caspase 3,GLI1,lung remodeling,host-directed therapy

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