Abstract

ABSTRACTCandida auris is an emerging yeast pathogen of candidemia with the ability to develop resistance to all current antifungal drug classes. Novel antifungal therapies against C. auris are warranted. NSC319726 is a thiosemicarbazone with an inhibitory effect on fungal ribosome biogenesis that has demonstrated some antifungal activity. In this study, we assessed the in vitro activity and in vivo efficacy of NSC319726 against C. auris. NSC319726 was active in vitro against 22 C. auris isolates from different clades, with MICs ranging from 0.125 to 0.25 mg/liter. Despite complete visual growth inhibition, the effect was described as fungistatic in time-kill curves. Interactions with fluconazole, amphotericin B, and micafungin, as tested by the checkerboard dilution method, were described as indifferent. NSC319726 demonstrated significant effects in rescuing G. mellonella larvae infected with two distinct C. auris isolates, compared to the untreated group. In conclusion, NSC319726 demonstrated in vitro activity against C. auris and in vivo efficacy in an invertebrate model of infection. Its potential role as a novel antifungal therapy in humans should be further investigated.IMPORTANCE Candida auris is emerging as a major public health threat because of its ability to cause nosocomial outbreaks of severe invasive candidiasis. Management of C. auris infection is difficult because of its frequent multidrug-resistant profile for currently licensed antifungals. Here, we show that the thiosemicarbazone NSC319726 was active in vitro against a large collection of C. auris isolates from different clades. Moreover, the drug was well tolerated and effective for the treatment of C. auris infection in an invertebrate model of Galleria mellonella. We conclude that NSC319726 might represent an interesting drug candidate for the treatment of C. auris infection.

Highlights

  • Candida auris is an emerging yeast pathogen of candidemia with the ability to develop resistance to all current antifungal drug classes

  • NSC319726 is a thiosemicarbazone with zinc-chelating and redox properties that has been investigated for its potential in anticancer therapy and has demonstrated antibacterial and antifungal activity [9, 10, 12]

  • We showed that NSC319726 was active against a collection of C. auris isolates from different clades, including isolates with presumed resistance to the current antifungal classes

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Summary

Introduction

Candida auris is an emerging yeast pathogen of candidemia with the ability to develop resistance to all current antifungal drug classes. NSC319726 demonstrated in vitro activity against C. auris and in vivo efficacy in an invertebrate model of infection. We show that the thiosemicarbazone NSC319726 was active in vitro against a large collection of C. auris isolates from different clades. NSC319726 is a thiosemicarbazone zinc chelator that inhibits the growth of mammalian cancer cell lines with a p53 mutation [9] This compound demonstrated antifungal activity against several Candida species, Cryptococcus neoformans, and Aspergillus fumigatus [10]. The aim of this study was to measure the antifungal activity of NSC319726 against a collection of 22 clinical isolates of C. auris, in comparison to standard antifungals, and to assess its efficacy in an invertebrate model of C. auris infection

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