1. Academic Validation
  2. Repurposing Fenamic Acid Drugs To Combat Multidrug-Resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae

Repurposing Fenamic Acid Drugs To Combat Multidrug-Resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae

  • Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2020 Jun 23;64(7):e02206-19. doi: 10.1128/AAC.02206-19.
Young Jin Seong 1 Marwa Alhashimi 1 Abdelrahman Mayhoub 2 3 Haroon Mohammad 1 Mohamed N Seleem 4 5
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Department of Comparative Pathobiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, USA.
  • 2 Department of Pharmaceutical Organic Chemistry, College of Pharmacy, Al-Azhar University, Cairo, Egypt.
  • 3 University of Science and Technology, Nanoscience Program, Zewail City of Science and Technology, October Gardens, 6th of October, Giza, Egypt.
  • 4 Department of Comparative Pathobiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, USA [email protected].
  • 5 Purdue Institute of Inflammation, Immunology, and Infectious Disease, West Lafayette, Indiana, USA.
Abstract

The rise of extensively drug-resistant and multidrug-resistant strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae has occurred in parallel with the increasing demand for new drugs. However, the current methods of drug discovery are burdened with rigorous assessments and require more time than can be spared until gonococcal infections become difficult to control. To address this urgency, we utilized a drug-repurposing strategy and identified three clinically approved anthranilic acid drugs (tolfenamic acid, flufenamic acid, and meclofenamic acid) with potent antigonococcal activity, inhibiting 50% of the strains (MIC50) from 4 to 16 μg/ml. Furthermore, tolfenamic acid showed indifferent activity with Antibiotics of choice for gonococcal infections, azithromycin and ceftriaxone, in checkerboard assays with a fractional inhibitory concentration index ranging from 0.75 to 1.5. Fenamic acids reduced a high inoculum of N. gonorrhoeae below the limit of detection within 12 h and exhibited a low frequency of resistance. Interestingly, the fenamic acids did not inhibit the growth of commensal Lactobacillus spp. that comprise the healthy female genital microbiota. Fenamic acids were also superior to ceftriaxone in reducing the burden of intracellular N. gonorrhoeae within infected endocervical cells by 99%. Furthermore, all three fenamic acids significantly reduced the expression of proinflammatory cytokines by infected endocervical cells. Finally, fenamic acids and other structurally related anthranilic acid derivatives were evaluated to ascertain a more in-depth structure-activity relationship (SAR) that revealed N-phenylanthranilic acid as a novel antigonorrheal scaffold. This SAR study will pave the road to repositioning more potent fenamic acids analogues against N. gonorrhoeae.

Keywords

IL-8; Neisseria; drug repurposing; drug resistant; endocervical cells; fenamic acids; multidrug resistant.

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