A high-throughput whole cell screen to identify inhibitors of Mycobacterium tuberculosis

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Abstract

Tuberculosis is a disease of global importance for which novel drugs are urgently required. We developed a whole-cell phenotypic screen which can be used to identify inhibitors of Mycobacterium tuberculosis growth. We used recombinant strains of virulent M. tuberculosis which express far-red fluorescent reporters and used fluorescence to monitor growth in vitro. We optimized our high throughput assays using both 96-well and 384-well plates; both formats gave assays which met stringent reproducibility and robustness tests. We screened a compound set of 1105 chemically diverse compounds previously shown to be active against M. tuberculosis and identified primary hits which showed 90% growth inhibition. We ranked hits and identified three chemical classes of interest–the phenoxyalkylbenzami-dazoles, the benzothiophene 1–1 dioxides, and the piperidinamines. These new compound classes may serve as starting points for the development of new series of inhibitors that prevent the growth of M. tuberculosis. This assay can be used for further screening, or could easily be adapted to other strains of M. tuberculosis.

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Ollinger, J., Kumar, A., Roberts, D. M., Bailey, M. A., Casey, A., & Parish, T. (2019). A high-throughput whole cell screen to identify inhibitors of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. PLoS ONE, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0205479

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