PLoS ONEplosplosonePLOS ONE1932-6203Public Library of ScienceSan Francisco, CA USA10.1371/journal.pone.0205479PONE-D-18-27648Research ArticleBiology and life sciencesOrganismsBacteriaActinobacteriaMycobacterium tuberculosisBiology and life sciencesMolecular biologyMolecular biology techniquesMolecular biology assays and analysis techniquesLibrary screeningResearch and analysis methodsMolecular biology techniquesMolecular biology assays and analysis techniquesLibrary screeningBiology and life sciencesMolecular biologyMolecular biology techniquesMolecular biology assays and analysis techniquesHigh throughput screeningResearch and analysis methodsMolecular biology techniquesMolecular biology assays and analysis techniquesHigh throughput screeningComputer and information sciencesInformation theoryBackground signal noiseEngineering and technologySignal processingBackground signal noiseEngineering and technologySignal processingSignal to noise ratioMedicine and health sciencesPharmacologyDrug research and developmentDrug discoveryTuberculosis drug discoveryBiology and life sciencesMicrobiologyMicrobial controlAntimicrobial resistanceAntibiotic resistanceMedicine and health sciencesPharmacologyAntimicrobial resistanceAntibiotic resistancePhysical sciencesPhysicsElectromagnetic radiationLuminescenceFluorescenceA high-throughput whole cell screen to identify inhibitors of Mycobacterium tuberculosisM. tuberculosis whole cell screenOllingerJulianeConceptualizationFormal analysisInvestigationMethodologySupervisionValidationWriting – review & editingKumarAnuradhaConceptualizationData curationFormal analysisSupervisionValidationWriting – original draftWriting – review & editingRobertsDavid M.ConceptualizationData curationFormal analysisInvestigationMethodologyValidationWriting – review & editingBaileyMai A.ConceptualizationInvestigationMethodologyValidationWriting – review & editingCaseyAllenData curationInvestigationMethodologySupervisionValidationWriting – review & editinghttp://orcid.org/0000-0001-7507-0423ParishTanyaConceptualizationData curationFormal analysisFunding acquisitionInvestigationMethodologyResourcesSupervisionValidationWriting – original draftWriting – review & editing*Infectious Disease Research Institute, Seattle, Washington, United States of AmericaBogyoMatthewEditorStanford University, UNITED STATES
Tanya Parish serves on the Editorial Board of PLOS ONE. This does not alter the authors' adherence to all the PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials.
* E-mail: Tanya.Parish@idri.org16120192019141e0205479219201841220182019Ollinger et alThis is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
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 phenoxyalkylbenzamidazoles, 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.
http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100004312Eli Lilly and CompanyLilly TB Drug Discovery Initiativehttp://orcid.org/0000-0001-7507-0423ParishTanyaThe work at IDRI was funded in part by Eli Lilly and Company in support of the mission of the Lilly TB Drug Discovery Initiative. There was no additional external funding received for this study. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.Data AvailabilityThe data underlying this study are available through the following link: https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bioassay/1259417.Introduction
Tuberculosis (TB), caused by the bacterial pathogen Mycobacterium tuberculosis, is a disease of global importance which killed approximately 1.7 million people in 2016 [1]. A lengthy 4-drug regimen is used to treat active infection, but drug resistant strains have emerged and threaten efforts to control the disease. Multi-drug resistant (MDR) and extremely drug resistant (XDR) TB are gaining footholds in areas where HIV is predominant and/or antibiotic treatment of patients is administered incompletely or incorrectly [1]. Thus, there is an urgent need for new drugs that are effective at killing M. tuberculosis and which might shorten therapy.
High throughput screening of small molecules has the potential to identify new compound classes that are effective against M. tuberculosis. Biochemical screens have been used to find inhibitors of specific targets, normally essential enzymes. A number of targets have been tested [2–15] but this approach had limited success in finding hits with whole cell activity for a variety of reasons including lack of permeation, efflux, and poor target vulnerability or engagement [16].
In contrast, phenotypic screening relies on identifying compounds with whole cell activity from the outset, with no knowledge of the cellular target. Although there remain challenges in dealing with an organism which grows very slowly and requires handling within specialized containment facilities. A number of assays have been developed which use different approaches, for example the use of non-pathogenic surrogates such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Ra [17], Mycobacterium smegmatis [18] or Mycobacterium aurum [19]. High throughput screening has been conducted with M. tuberculosis under a variety of conditions, including nutrient starvation [20], under multiple stresses [21, 22], or during infection of host cells [23, 24]. Assays using live cells are also available to determine disruption of specific pathways, such as ATP homeostasis [25], pH homeostasis [26], biofilm formation [27] or under specific conditions such as low oxygen [28].
Material and methodsBacterial strains and growth conditions
M. tuberculosis H37Rv LP (ATCC 25618) [29] was grown in Middlebrook 7H9 medium supplemented with 10% v/v oleic acid, albumin, dextrose, catalase (OADC; Becton Dickinson), 0.05% w/v Tween 80 (7H9-OADC-Tw), and 50 μg/mL hygromycin (7H9-OADC-Tw-hyg), where required. Large scale cultures were grown in 100 mL of medium in 450 cm2 roller bottles at 37°C and 100 rpm. M. tuberculosis strain CHEAM3 and DREAM8 expressing codon-optimized mCherry and DsRed from plasmids pCherry3 [30] and pBlazeC8 [31], respectively, were used.
Preparation of assay plates
Medium and compound was dispensed into sterile, black, 384-well, clear bottom plates (Greiner) using a Minitrak (Packard BioScience) with a 384-well head contained in a custom HEPA enclosure. Controls were 100 μM rifampicin in column 1 (final assay concentration of 2 μM rifampicin), DMSO in column 2 (final assay concentration 2%) and 125 nM rifampicin in column 23 (final assay concentration of 2.5 nM). M. tuberculosis culture was added to columns 1–23 using a MultiDrop Combi (Thermo Fisher); column 24 was not inoculated (contamination control).
Growth in plates
M. tuberculosis was grown to logarithmic phase (OD590 = 0.6–0.9) and filtered through a 0.5 μm cellulose-acetate membrane filter, diluted in fresh medium, and inoculated into 96-well or 384-well plates containing medium. Plates were incubated in plastic bags in a humidified incubator at 37°C. OD and fluorescence were read using a Synergy 4 plate reader (BioTek) with excitation/emission of 586nm/614nm for mCherry and 560nm/590nm for DsRed.
Data analysis
OD590 and fluorescence readouts were analyzed independently. The coefficient of variation (CV) was calculated as the standard deviation (StdDev) ÷ Mean. For each plate the minimum and maximum growth controls were used to determine the signal to background (S:B) ratio (calculated as MeanMaxSignal÷MeanMinSignal), signal to noise (S:N) ratio (calculated as (MeanMaxSignal˗MeanMinSignal)÷StdDevMinSignal), and the Z-factor of the controls (1- ((3*StdDevMaxSignal + 3*StdDevMinSignal)÷(MeanMaxSignal-MeanMinSignal)). For each well, the % inhibition was calculated with reference to the maximum growth control (DMSO only).
The complete data set is available at https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bioassay/1259417
Results and discussionAssay development
We were interested in developing a simple whole cell screen which could be used in multiple formats to assess the anti-tubercular activity of large compound sets. We previously developed an assay to monitor growth based on fluorescence and optical density using a strain of M. tuberculosis constitutively expressing the far-red reporter mCherry which was robust and reproducible in 96-well format [32]. In this study we used recombinant M. tuberculosis constitutively expressing either codon-optimized DsRed or mCherry to develop a 384-well high throughput assay.
We determined the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) for rifampicin against the parental strain (H37Rv-LP; ATCC 25618) and both the fluorescent strains (CHEAM3 expressing mCherry from plasmid pCherry3, and DREAM8 expressing DsRed from plasmid pBlazeC8). We used a 10-point, 2-fold serial dilution in independent experiments in 96-well plates. Growth inhibition was calculated compared to control wells (DMSO), and curves fit using the four-parameter Levenberg-Marqardt algorithm. For both strains, we calculated MICs using OD590 and fluorescence independently and observed that the MIC for rifampicin was equivalent to the parental strain H37Rv-LP strain (Table 1). MICs derived using fluorescence as a readout were equivalent to OD590-derived values (Table 1). Once we had confirmed the equivalence of the three strains in 96-well plates, we determined key parameters for transferring the assay to higher throughput in 384-well plates.
10.1371/journal.pone.0205479.t001
Determination of rifampicin activity against recombinant strains.
MIC (nM)
(OD590)
(RFU)
H37Rv-LP
6.6 ± 2.5 (n = 85)
na
CHEAM3
7.5 ± 1.9 (n = 96)
6.8 ± 2.2 (n = 86)
DREAM8
7.1 ± 2.2 (n = 520)
6.9 ± 2.4 (n = 520)
MIC, the concentration required to inhibit growth by 90%; na, not applicable
Optimizing fluorescence measurements
We optimized a number of parameters and variables. We had previously determined the optimal parameters for measuring mCherry fluorescence [32]. For DsRed, we ran a set of spectral scans varying the excitation wavelength from 540 nm to 565 nm with a fixed emission of 590 nm, and varying the emission wavelength from 580 to 630 nm with a fixed excitation of 558 nm (Fig 1A and 1B). The signal was optimal at a range of excitation wavelengths around 560 nm, while it peaked at the emission wavelength of 592nm. Based on these scans we selected excitation and emission wavelengths of 560nm and 590nm for DsRed.
10.1371/journal.pone.0205479.g001
Optimization of fluorescence measurements.
DREAM8 was dispensed into 384-well plates and fluorescence was measured at varying excitation wavelengths when the emission wavelength was fixed at 590nm (A) or at varying emission wavelengths when a fixed excitation of 558nm was used (B). Data are the average ± SD from four wells.
We tested the alternatives of bottom and top-read optics in the plate-reader. We compared the use of an external plate shaker or the integral plate shaker in the reader. We obtained the lowest signal to noise (S:N) ratio when plates were not shaken prior to reading and when fluorescence measurements were performed using the bottom optics on the plate reader.
Optimizing inoculum and growth conditions
Several additional assay parameters were tested in the 384-well plates to determine the final assay conditions; the inoculum concentration, and the number of days of incubation prior to measurement of M. tuberculosis growth were adjusted to minimize the assay volume while optimizing for signal and reproducibility. At a starting OD590 of 0.01, growth was still logarithmic between 4 and 5 days of incubation, whereas at a higher inoculum of OD590 = 0.05, cell growth plateaued at 5 days of growth (S1 Fig). To refine further we performed serial dilutions of CHEAM3 and monitored growth after five days of incubation. We measured fluorescence at the start of the experiment and on day 5 and calculated the S:B ratio (using the values obtained on day 0 of the experiment as the background) (Fig 2A). Wells with starting densities of 0.02–0.03 gave the highest S:B (Fig 2A). We ran a similar experiment using starting inocula of 0.01, 0.02 and 0.03 and incubated for 4 or 5 days, but we measured the ratio between full growth and complete inhibition using 2 μM rifampicin (Fig 2B); we found a higher ratio using OD590 of 0.02–0.03 (ratio of 13.0 and 13.8 respectively). However, variation was greater using the larger inoculum of OD590 = 0.03, with a coeffeicient of variance (CV) of 9%, as compared to a CV of 5% for the inoculum at OD590 = 0.02. Thus a starting OD590 of 0.02 produced the best signal window and reproducibility in the 384-well assay.
10.1371/journal.pone.0205479.g002
Optimization of growth conditions.
(A) Serial dilutions of CHEAM3 were plated in triplicate in a 384 well plate and measured for fluorescence before and after five days of incubation. The signal to background (S:B) for each inoculum was calculated (average signal D0÷average signal D5) to identify the greatest amplitude to measure growth of cells over the course of 5 days. (B) 320 experimental wells of a 384 well plate were inoculated with CHEAM3 diluted to a starting OD590 of 0.01, 0.02 or 0.03. Plates were read on D4 and D5. The average fluorescence for each condition (n = 320) was plotted, with error bars indicating the standard deviation. The calculated signal to background (S:B) is shown above each bar.
Our final assay conditions were to inoculate 10 μL of M. tuberculosis at OD590 = 0.06 into 384-well plates prefilled with 20 μL of medium to give a final theoretical OD590 of 0.02. Plates were incubated for 5 days at 37°C and both fluorescence and OD590 measured.
Validation of 384-well plate assay
Once the assay conditions were optimized, we assessed reproducibility according to NCGC guidelines [33]. Assay plates containing 20 μL of 7H9-Tw-OADC medium were prepared in a sterile environment. For validation, DMSO or test compounds were added to wells and the plates were inoculated with 10 μL of M. tuberculosis at an OD590 of 0.06. The final volume in each well was 30 μL, the final OD590 was 0.02, and the final concentration of DMSO in each well was 2%. Plates were incubated for five days at 37°C in a humidified incubator. The plate layout was arranged as 320 sample wells in columns 3–22. The remaining four columns were reserved for plate controls: Column 1—minimum signal (2 μM rifampicin); Column 2—maximum signal (DMSO); Column 23—midpoint signal (2.5 nM rifampicin); Column 24 –contamination control (medium only, no inoculum). To test assay reproducibility, we ran a set of six plates independently on three days; two plates of minimum signal, two plates of maximum signal and two plates of midpoint signal (Fig 3). The % growth in each well was calculated with reference to the maximum signal (Column 2).
10.1371/journal.pone.0205479.g003
High throughput screen validation scatter plots: Two plates each containing minimum, midpoint, and maximum signal controls were run in 384-well plates on three separate days using the final assay conditions.
Recombinant M. tuberculosis expressing (A)DsRed or (B) mCherry was grown for 5 days. Relative fluorescence units (RFU) were measured in each well.
For each strain 2 plates containing maximum signal (Max = M. tuberculosis grown with 2% DMSO), mid signal (Mid = M. tuberculosis grown in the presence of 2.5 nM rifampicin), and minimum signal (Min = M. tuberculosis in the presence of 2 μM rifampicin) were run on three separate days. Max and Min controls (n = 16) from within each plate were used to calculate the signal to noise ratio (S:N), signal to background ratio (S:B), and Z-factor (measure of assay robustness as defined earlier). Intraplate controls were also used to calculate the % growth in each well. For the 320 sample wells in each individual plate the average signal, percent coefficient of variance (% CV) of the signal, and average % growth were calculated. The assay statistics generated to validate these two high throughput screens are shown in Table 2A and 2B.
10.1371/journal.pone.0205479.t002
High throughput screen validation statistics.
A. DREAM8 validation
intra-plate controls
Signal
Day
Plate
S:N
S:B
Z '
Avg Signal (RFU)
% CV
% growth
Max
1
1
169
13
0.90
12.8
6.9
-0.4
Max
1
2
261
13
0.89
12.8
6.5
-0.4
Max
2
1
189
14
0.93
13.0
8.4
-0.1
Max
2
2
127
14
0.91
13.4
7.8
0.3
Max
3
1
119
14
0.87
12.5
7.8
0.0
Max
3
2
187
15
0.83
12.3
7.4
0.1
Mid
1
1
179
13
0.89
110.6
6.4
60.7
Mid
1
2
250
13
0.88
105.1
4.7
58.3
Mid
2
1
244
12
0.93
135.8
3.3
79.2
Mid
2
2
106
12
0.92
132.8
3.2
78.4
Mid
3
1
226
14
0.90
126.1
7.8
69.8
Mid
3
2
187
14
0.87
121.4
5.2
68.0
Min
1
1
178
13
0.88
161.2
2.1
97.3
Min
1
2
172
13
0.86
167.9
2.7
96.6
Min
2
1
136
12
0.87
164.8
1.7
97.0
Min
2
2
167
12
0.94
165.4
2.3
97.6
Min
3
1
180
13
0.86
171.5
2.8
99.2
Min
3
2
149
14
0.85
173.3
2.7
97.0
B. CHEAM3 validation
intra-plate controls
Signal
Day
Plate
S:N
S:B
Z '
Avg Signal (RFU)
% CV
% growth
Max
1
1
169
12
0.89
14.6
6.5
0.0
Max
1
2
161
12
0.87
14.8
6.5
0.1
Max
2
1
200
11
0.79
14.8
6.0
-0.3
Max
2
2
186
11
0.70
15.0
6.1
-0.4
Max
3
1
273
11
0.90
15.1
6.2
-0.1
Max
3
2
175
11
0.88
15.1
6.4
-0.2
Mid
1
1
245
12
0.88
127.2
4.5
63.4
Mid
1
2
172
12
0.79
128.2
5.3
63.9
Mid
2
1
167
10
0.80
145.1
5.0
90.7
Mid
2
2
177
10
0.75
144.9
5.6
90.5
Mid
3
1
150
11
0.91
131.1
7.7
77.3
Mid
3
2
247
10
0.90
122.5
12.3
68.1
Min
1
1
237
12
0.93
183.3
2.8
100.4
Min
1
2
206
12
0.86
183.1
2.5
99.7
Min
2
1
130
10
0.78
145.9
6.1
98.3
Min
2
2
137
10
0.75
147.6
3.7
101.2
Min
3
1
187
11
0.88
165.7
2.7
98.2
Min
3
2
249
11
0.88
166.6
2.5
97.6
The Z-factor, an indication of the robustness of the assay [34] was ≥ 0.7 in all plates. S:N was > 100 for both strains and S:B was ≥ 12 for DsRed and ≥ 10 for mCherry. The CV was < 20% in all plate. The average mid-point signal did not vary more than 1.5-fold within a run or across the three runs. Thus, both assays passed statistical validation.
High throughput screen
To examine the performance of our high-throughput assay, we tested a set of compounds with known activity against M. tuberculosis. The Tuberculosis Antimicrobial Acquisition and Coordinating Facility (TAACF) at the Southern Research Institute (SRI) screened libraries containing over 300,000 compounds to identify inhibitors of M. tuberculosis growth [35, 36]. From the hits identified in these two screens a diversity set of 1105 compounds was obtained from the Division of Microbiology and Infectious Disease (DMID) at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) as a library of potential anti-tubercular agents for the further development of M. tuberculosis drug development assays [37]. We obtained this set of compounds and tested them in both HTS-validated assays.
Compounds were obtained in plates, diluted to 0.35 mg/mL and transferred directly into assay plates to yield a final assay concentration of 7 μg/mL (final concentration of 2% DMSO). The standard assay conditions were used for each strain and % growth inhibition was plotted (Fig 4A and 4B). Because the average of the maximum growth controls in each plate (n = 16) were used to calculate the % inhibition, any test well in which the fluorescence signal was higher than the control mean would be calculated as having negative inhibition. The Pearson coefficient, a statistical measurement of correlation between two data sets, was calculated for each strain. Fig 4A shows the replicate runs of CHEAM3 with a Pearson coefficient of r = 0.98 (p<0.0001). When DREAM8 was the strain used in the screen the correlation coefficient was r = 0.99 (p<0.0001) (Fig 4B). Thus the assay performed well in repeat runs with a large compound set.
10.1371/journal.pone.0205479.g004
Small molecule compound library screen: A selected library of 1105 small molecules from NIH-SRI/TAACF was screened in replicate experiments against (A) CHEAM3 or (B) DREAM8. The % inhibition for each compound was calculated. The results from the first and second runs are plotted on the x- and y-axis, respectively, for both strains. For each strain the Pearson coefficient of linear correlation between the two replicate data sets was calculated in Graphpad Prism and is shown in boxed text in the upper right corner of each plot. (C) The average % inhibition of CHEAM3 and DREAM8 growth was calculated and plotted on the x- and y- axis, respectively. The calculated Pearson co-efficient comparing the data generated from the two different strains is shown in boxed text in the upper right corner of the plot.
We compared the data between the two strains of M. tuberculosis strains (Fig 4C). There was a linear relationship between the two strains with a Pearson coefficient of r = 0.91. Thus, there was no statistical difference between the two strains.
Using CHEAM3, 470 compounds inhibited M. tuberculosis growth ≥ 80% while 169 compounds inhibited ≥ 99% (Fig 4A). Using DREAM8, 403 compounds inhibited ≥ 80% growth and 182 compounds inhibited ≥ 99% growth (Fig 4B). 377 compounds inhibited ≥ 80% growth in both strains. There were some minor differences between the two strains. 141 compounds showed ≥ 99% inhibition in both strains, with an additional 69 compounds with %I ≥ 99 in only one of the two strains (41 in DREAM8 and 28 in CHEAM3). However, of these 69 compounds 64 inhibited growth of the alternate strain by at least 90%. The hits from the screen were analysed and revealed three chemotypes of interest for further development: the phenoxyalkylbenzimidazoles (PAB), the benzothiophene 1–1 dioxides (BTD), and the piperidinamines (PIP). The other chemotypes in the library have been more thoroughly described in the two publications that first screened these molecules against M. tuberculosis [35, 36].
Discussion
We developed high throughput assays capable of screening large numbers of compounds using two fluorescent reporter strains of M. tuberculosis. We used both assays to screen a set of known compounds. Results from these assays were reproducible and the two strains yielded comparable results.
Only a fraction of the compounds we tested had activity against M. tuberculosis in our assays, even though these had previously been identified as active [35, 36]. A significant difference between the two screens is that we used a lower concentration of 7 μg/mL, as compared to 20 μg/ml previously used; thus we will only detect the more potent compounds. There are also some technical differences between the two assays, in particular that we used OD590 and fluorescence as a measure of increase in bacterial numbers, whereas the previous screen used Alamar Blue which monitors metabolic activity.
Using our fluorescent reporter strains, we identified 210 compounds that inhibited ≥ 99% growth, 141 of which inhibited ≥ 99% growth in both strains. We highlighted three chemotypes that were of interest to our group; the phenoxyalkylbenzimidazoles (PAB), benzothiophene 1–1 dioxides (BTD), and piperidinamines (PIP). We selected these chemical classes as being novel anti-mycobacterials and we (and others) have investigated these further in other publications pertaining to their recent characterization and development.
Compounds containing the benzimidazole core have long been known to have broad spectrum antibacterial activity [38, 39]. In the M. tuberculosis phenotypic screen performed by Ananthan et al., 88 compounds with the phenoxyalkylimidazole core were tested, PAB being the most potent active identified in this series, and the only compound in that study with benzimidazole substituted for the imidazole [35]. There have since been reports of benzimidazoles having activity against M. tuberculosis [40, 41]. We investigated this series and confirmed its potent activity and selectivity [42]. We have also shown that this class of compounds targets the electron transport chain, specifically targeting QcrB [43].
The benzothiophene 1–1 dioxides (BTD) series was also highlighted by Ananthan et al., as a chemotype. There were only a small number of analogs within this chemotype in their larger screen, all containing a thioether group at the 3-position and the most potent being the compound shown in Fig 5. They further noted that there were 40 additional compounds with the thiopene 1–1 dioxides lacking the benzene substitution in their primary screen, all of which lacked activity. Using this as a starting point we explored the BTD series and evaluated their activity against M. tuberculosis. We were able to derive compounds that had good anti-tubercular activity (with MICs of 3–8 μM) but were unable to identify potent compounds analogs that were not cytotoxic to eukaryotic cells [44].
10.1371/journal.pone.0205479.g005
Selected hit compounds from screen.
Three hit chemotypes identified in our screen were noted as being of interest for further development. Their structures and MICs are shown.
Some work has been done on piperidinamine-containing molecules as motilin-receptor agonists [45] and their clinical development for treating type 1 diabetes [46, 47]. Our screen identified the piperidinamines (PIP) as a potent chemotype. We obtained analogs within this chemotype that were commercially available and evaluated them for activity against M. tuberculosis, but none showed activity [48]. Based on our exploration of modifications around the piperidine core, we were unable to identify avenues for improved activity, and to our knowledge, the PIP chemotype has not yet further developed as an anti-tubercular agent.
In summary, we have developed and validated a robust whole cell phenotypic assay for M. tuberculosis in 384-well plates using one of two fluorescent reporters with equivalent outcomes. We used these assays to identify potent inhibitors of M. tuberculosis growth that have since proven to be interesting leads for drug development. This assay provides robust and reproducible results, and can be a core tool for high-throughput screening of large chemical libraries for the discovery of novel chemical entities to treat tuberculosis
Supporting information
Preliminary study of M. tuberculosis growth conditions in 384-well plates.
(A) CHEAM3 was diluted to an OD590 of 0.05 and 80 μL was plated in the wells of 384-well plates and incubated for 1, 2, 3, 5 or 6 days. Fluorescence was measured and the mean fluorescence from 192 wells (12 columns) is plotted along with error bars indicating the standard deviation (B) CHEAM3 was diluted to a theoretical OD590 of 0.01 and 30 μL was plated in the wells of 384 well plates. Plates were incubated for 3, 4 or 5 days. Fluorescence was measured in each well and the average fluorescence (n = 384) was plotted with error bars indicating the standard deviation.
(TIF)
This work was funded in part by Eli Lilly and Company in support of the mission of the Lilly TB Drug Discovery Initiative. There was no additional external funding received for this study.
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