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result(s) for
"Maitra, Arundhati"
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The impact of physiological state and environmental stress on bacterial load estimation methodologies for Mycobacterium tuberculosis
by
Maitra, Arundhati
,
Kloprogge, Frank
,
Denti, Paolo
in
631/326/22/1290
,
631/326/2521
,
692/308/2778
2024
When processed in solid or liquid medium, tuberculosis patient samples yield different proportions of a heterogenous bacterial community over the duration of treatment. We aimed to derive a relationship between methodologies for bacterial load determination and assess the effect of the growth phase of the parent culture and its exposure to stress on the results.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
H37Rv was grown with and without antibiotic (isoniazid or rifampicin) and sampled on day 0, 3, 11 and 21 of growth in broth culture. The bacterial load was estimated by colony counts and the BD BACTEC MGIT system. Linear and nonlinear mixed-effects models were used to describe the relationship between time-to-positivity (TTP) and time-to-growth (TTG) versus colony forming units (CFU), and growth units (GU) versus incubation time in MGIT. For samples with the same CFU, antibiotic-treated and stationary phase cells had a shorter TTP than antibiotic-free controls and early-logarithmic phase cells, respectively. Similarly, stationary phase samples reached higher GUs and had shorter TTG than early-log phase ones. This suggests that there is a population of bacterial cells that can be differentially recovered in liquid medium, giving us insight into the physiological states of the original culture, aiding the interpretation of clinical trial outputs.
Journal Article
Novel Anti-Tuberculosis Nanodelivery Formulation of Ethambutol with Graphene Oxide
by
Maitra, Arundhati
,
Hussein, Mohd
,
Saifullah, Bullo
in
Animals
,
Antibiotics
,
Antitubercular Agents - administration & dosage
2017
Tuberculosis (TB) is a bacterial disease responsible for millions of infections and preventable deaths each year. Its treatment is complicated by patients’ noncompliance due to dosing frequency, lengthy treatment, and adverse side effects associated with current chemotherapy. However, no modifications to the half-a-century old standard chemotherapy have been made based on a nanoformulation strategy to improve pharmacokinetic efficacy. In this study, we have designed a new nanodelivery formulation, using graphene oxide as the nanocarrier, loaded with the anti-TB antibiotic, ethambutol. The designed formulation was characterized using a number of molecular analytical techniques. It was found that sustained release of the drug resulted in better bioavailability. In addition, the designed formulation demonstrated high biocompatibility with mouse fibroblast cells. The anti-TB activity of the nanodelivery formulation was determined using whole-cell resazurin microtiter plate assay, modified-spot culture growth inhibition assay, and biofilm inhibition assay. The nanodelivery formulation showed good anti-mycobacterial activity. The anti-mycobacterial activity of Ethambutol was unaffected by the drug loading and release process. The results of this study demonstrated the potential of this new nanodelivery formulation strategy to be considered for modifying existing chemotherapy to yield more efficacious antibiotic treatment against TB.
Journal Article
Nano-Formulation of Ethambutol with Multifunctional Graphene Oxide and Magnetic Nanoparticles Retains Its Anti-Tubercular Activity with Prospects of Improving Chemotherapeutic Efficacy
by
Maitra, Arundhati
,
Hussein, Mohd
,
Saifullah, Bullo
in
ambutol
,
Animals
,
Antitubercular Agents - chemistry
2017
Tuberculosis (TB) is a dreadful bacterial disease, infecting millions of human and cattle every year worldwide. More than 50 years after its discovery, ethambutol continues to be an effective part of the World Health Organization’s recommended frontline chemotherapy against TB. However, the lengthy treatment regimens consisting of a cocktail of antibiotics affect patient compliance. There is an urgent need to improve the current therapy so as to reduce treatment duration and dosing frequency. In this study, we have designed a novel anti-TB multifunctional formulation by fabricating graphene oxide with iron oxide magnetite nanoparticles serving as a nano-carrier on to which ethambutol was successfully loaded. The designed nanoformulation was characterised using various analytical techniques. The release of ethambutol from anti-TB multifunctional nanoparticles formulation was found to be sustained over a significantly longer period of time in phosphate buffer saline solution at two physiological pH (7.4 and 4.8). Furthermore, the nano-formulation showed potent anti-tubercular activity while remaining non-toxic to the eukaryotic cells tested. The results of this in vitro evaluation of the newly designed nano-formulation endorse its further development in vivo.
Journal Article
Improving the Drug Development Pipeline for Mycobacteria: Modelling Antibiotic Exposure in the Hollow Fibre Infection Model
by
Maitra, Arundhati
,
Solanki, Priya
,
Kloprogge, Frank
in
Antibiotic resistance
,
Antibiotics
,
Antiinfectives and antibacterials
2021
Mycobacterial infections are difficult to treat, requiring a combination of drugs and lengthy treatment times, thereby presenting a substantial burden to both the patient and health services worldwide. The limited treatment options available are under threat due to the emergence of antibiotic resistance in the pathogen, hence necessitating the development of new treatment regimens. Drug development processes are lengthy, resource intensive, and high-risk, which have contributed to market failure as demonstrated by pharmaceutical companies limiting their antimicrobial drug discovery programmes. Pre-clinical protocols evaluating treatment regimens that can mimic in vivo PK/PD attributes can underpin the drug development process. The hollow fibre infection model (HFIM) allows for the pathogen to be exposed to a single or a combination of agents at concentrations achieved in vivo–in plasma or at infection sites. Samples taken from the HFIM, depending on the analyses performed, provide information on the rate of bacterial killing and the emergence of resistance. Thereby, the HFIM is an effective means to investigate the efficacy of a drug combination. Although applicable to a wide variety of infections, the complexity of anti-mycobacterial drug discovery makes the information available from the HFIM invaluable as explored in this review.
Journal Article
Analogues of Disulfides from Allium stipitatum Demonstrate Potent Anti-tubercular Activities through Drug Efflux Pump and Biofilm Inhibition
by
Maitra, Arundhati
,
McHugh, Timothy D.
,
Stapleton, Paul
in
13/106
,
631/326/22/1290
,
639/638/309/2144
2018
Disulfides from
Allium stipitatum
, commonly known as Persian shallot, were previously reported to possess antibacterial properties. Analogues of these compounds, produced by
S
-methylthiolation of appropriate thiols using
S
-methyl methanethiosulfonate, exhibited antimicrobial activity, with one compound inhibiting the growth of
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
at 17 µM (4 mg L
−1
) and other compounds inhibiting
Escherichia coli
and multi-drug-resistant (MDR)
Staphylococcus aureus
at concentrations ranging between 32–138 µM (8–32 mg L
−1
). These compounds also displayed moderate inhibitory effects on
Klebsiella
and
Proteus
species. Whole-cell phenotypic bioassays such as the spot-culture growth inhibition assay (SPOTi), drug efflux inhibition, biofilm inhibition and cytotoxicity assays were used to evaluate these compounds. Of particular note was their ability to inhibit mycobacterial drug efflux and biofilm formation, while maintaining a high selectivity towards
M
.
tuberculosis
H37Rv. These results suggest that methyl disulfides are novel scaffolds which could lead to the development of new drugs against tuberculosis (TB).
Journal Article
3-(5-Nitrofuran-2-yl)prop-2-en-1-one Derivatives, with Potent Antituberculosis Activity, Inhibit A Novel Therapeutic Target, Arylamine N-acetyltransferase, in Mycobacteria
2020
In this study, the inhibitory potential of 3-(5-nitrofuran-2-yl)prop-2-en-1-one derivatives was evaluated against a panel of bacteria, as well as mammalian cell lines to determine their therapeutic index. In addition, we investigated the mechanism of antibiotic action of the derivatives to identify their therapeutic target. We discovered compound 2 to be an extremely potent inhibitor of Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv growth (MIC: 0.031 mg/L) in vitro, performing better than the currently used first-line antituberculosis drugs such as isoniazid, rifampicin, ethambutol, and pretomanid in vitro. Furthermore, compound 3 was equipotent to pretomanid against a multidrug-resistant M. tuberculosis clinical isolate. The derivatives were selective and bactericidal towards slow-growing mycobacteria. They showed low cytotoxicity towards murine RAW 264.7 and human THP-1 cell lines, with high selectivity indices. Compound 1 effectively eliminated the intracellular mycobacteria in a mycobacteria-infected macrophage model. The derivatives were assessed for their potential to inhibit mycobacterial arylamine N-acetyltransferase (NAT) and were identified as good inhibitors of recombinant mycobacterial NAT, a novel target essential for the intracellular survival of M. tuberculosis. This study provided hits for designing new potent and selective antituberculosis leads, having mycobacterial NAT inhibition as their possible endogenous mechanisms of action.
Journal Article
Cell wall peptidoglycan in Mycobacterium tuberculosis : An Achilles’ heel for the TB-causing pathogen
by
Maitra, Arundhati
,
Munshi, Tulika
,
Martin, Liam T
in
Animals
,
Antibiotic resistance
,
Antibiotics
2019
Tuberculosis (TB), caused by the intracellular pathogen Mycobacterium tuberculosis, remains one of the leading causes of mortality across the world. There is an urgent requirement to build a robust arsenal of effective antimicrobials, targeting novel molecular mechanisms to overcome the challenges posed by the increase of antibiotic resistance in TB. Mycobacterium tuberculosis has a unique cell envelope structure and composition, containing a peptidoglycan layer that is essential for maintaining cellular integrity and for virulence. The enzymes involved in the biosynthesis, degradation, remodelling and recycling of peptidoglycan have resurfaced as attractive targets for anti-infective drug discovery. Here, we review the importance of peptidoglycan, including the structure, function and regulation of key enzymes involved in its metabolism. We also discuss known inhibitors of ATP-dependent Mur ligases, and discuss the potential for the development of pan-enzyme inhibitors targeting multiple Mur ligases.
Journal Article
Characterization of the MurT/GatD complex in Mycobacterium tuberculosis towards validating a novel anti-tubercular drug target
2021
Objectives
Identification and validation of novel therapeutic targets is imperative to tackle the rise of drug resistance in tuberculosis. An essential Mur ligase-like gene (Rv3712), expected to be involved in cell-wall peptidoglycan (PG) biogenesis and conserved across mycobacteria, including the genetically depleted Mycobacterium leprae, was the primary focus of this study.
Methods
Biochemical analysis of Rv3712 was performed using inorganic phosphate release assays. The operon structure was identified using reverse-transcriptase PCR and a transcription/translation fusion vector. In vivo mycobacterial protein fragment complementation assays helped generate the interactome.
Results
Rv3712 was found to be an ATPase. Characterization of its operon revealed a mycobacteria-specific promoter driving the co-transcription of Rv3712 and Rv3713. The two gene products were found to interact with each other in vivo. Sequence-based functional assignments reveal that Rv3712 and Rv3713 are likely to be the mycobacterial PG precursor-modifying enzymes MurT and GatD, respectively. An in vivo network involving Mtb-MurT, regulatory proteins and cell division proteins was also identified.
Conclusions
Understanding the role of the enzyme complex in the context of PG metabolism and cell division, and the implications for antimicrobial resistance and host immune responses will facilitate the design of therapeutics that are targeted specifically to M. tuberculosis.
Journal Article
The impact of physiological state and environmental stress on bacterial load estimation methodologies for Mycobacterium tuberculosis
2024
Solid and liquid medium cultures from patient samples recover different proportions of a heterogenous bacterial community over the duration of treatment. In vitro experiments were designed to study the population composition at early-logarithmic and stationary phases of growth as well as under drug pressure.
To derive a relationship between methodologies for bacterial load determination and assess the effect of the growth phase of the parent culture and its exposure to stress on the results.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv was grown with and without drug (isoniazid or rifampicin) and sampled on day 0, 3, 11 and 21 of growth in broth culture. The bacterial load was estimated by colony counts and the BD BACTEC™ MGIT™ automated mycobacterial detection system. Linear and nonlinear mixed-effects models were used to describe the relationship between time-to-positivity (TTP) and time-to-growth (TTG) vs colony forming units (CFU), and growth units (GU) vs time.
For samples with the same CFU, drug-treated and stationary phase cells had a shorter TTP than the drug-free control and early-logarithmic phase cells respectively. Similarly, stationary phase samples reached higher GUs and had shorter time to start growing than early-log phase ones.
The growth phase affects the relationship between CFU-TTP/TTG and previous exposure to drugs affects only the relationship between CFU-TTP. This suggests that there is a population of bacterial cells that can be differentially recovered in liquid medium giving us an insight into the physiological states of the original culture which aids in the interpretation of clinical trial outputs.
Written in opposition: Narrator -narratee relationship in the major novels of George Eliot
This dissertation examines the major novels of George Eliot from the perspective of a narrator-narratee relationship that is always dialogic and frequently oppositional. The argument is based within the context of Reader-Response and Communication theories, more specifically Mikhail Bakhtin's theory of the dialogic nature of language, that posit dialogic narratives as the basis of creative writing. Initially, George Eliot's letters are discussed to show the evolution of a narrator-narratee relationship that is later carefully honed to a dialogic and contestatory one as she focuses on various themes and issues in the novels. The discussion of the novels involves a close reading of the narrator's addresses to the reader/narratee as also of those passages where the voice of the narrator is covertly present. The narrator's primary aim in the novels is to create his ideal narratee, and to that end the earlier novel such as Adam Bede has explicit passages on how to read and respond to the narrative. In the later novels the narrator begins to anticipate the narratee's opposition or unpreparedness for the text in more subtle ways, and also begins to inhabit more in the voices of principal protagonists than as an explicit persona. The dissertation argues that dialogue, whether assimilative or contestatory, makes empathy possible in the novels. Those characters who are incapable of dialogue are also incapable of triumphing over irreconcilable forces. The final discussions focus on the gradual fading out of the narrator from these dialogues as characters begin to take these on and initiate a discussion of the ambiguities of the narrator. In Daniel Deronda Deronda becomes a test case for the ubiquitous presence of a narrator/mentor figure, and the dissertation ends with hypotheses about Eliot's conscious awareness of the pitfalls of an omniscient narrator.
Dissertation