Researchers identify rare genetic markers of drug-resistant TB
Search for rare mutations in bacterial genome could lead to better diagnostics and treatments – reducing morbidity caused by the deadly disease.
To many, tuberculosis (TB) may seem like a disease from a bygone era. But it still claims more than one million lives every year. And the problem is growing worse as Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the pathogen that causes TB, continues to evolve resistance to the antibiotics used to treat the disease.
Now, researchers at San Diego State University and their
colleagues have identified rare genetic markers in M.
tuberculosis that could improve early detection of
drug-resistant strains of the disease, helping prevent their
spread.
To test whether someone has a strain of TB
that will no longer respond to standard treatment, clinicians
culture samples of mucus from the respiratory tract and barrage
them with antibiotics.
“But because TB
grows so slowly, that takes weeks,” said Faramarz Valafar,
a professor of public health. “In those weeks that patient
is going around spreading TB that might be
antibiotic-resistant.”
He says molecular
diagnostic tools are much faster. These test for common genetic
markers of drug resistance and allow for more timely treatment.
But TB strains with rare mechanisms of resistance —
lacking the common genetic markers — still elude molecular
detection.
This leads clinicians to incorrectly
conclude that standard TB drugs will kill the bacteria.
“And so the patient is given the wrong medications and
continues to infect others for weeks — sometimes months
— before they realize that these drugs aren't working. So
we really want to prevent that.”
Derek Conkle-Gutierrez, a doctoral student in Valafar’s
lab, led the search for rare genetic mutations associated with
resistance. The researchers obtained samples of M. tuberculosis
from seven countries where antibiotic resistance is common.
Culturing the samples revealed some were indeed drug-resistant,
even though molecular diagnostics had failed to catch them.
“First
we confirmed that they didn't have the known markers and then we
started looking for what other mutations are showing up
exclusively in these unexplained resistant isolates,” said
Conkle-Gutierrez.
The researchers identified one set
of rare genetic mutations that is known to block the common TB
drug kanamycin from interfering with the pathogen’s
ability to synthesize the proteins it needs, rendering it
harmless to the pathogen. Another set of mutations may do the
same for the TB drug capreomycin.
The study was supported by a grant from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) and is published in the journal Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy.
Next steps
“This manuscript identifies potential markers;
confirmatory work for the selection of markers for the next
generation of more comprehensive molecular diagnostic platforms
lies ahead,” said Valafar.
He says given the
evolution of antibiotic resistance, molecular diagnostics will
need to be updated frequently and be tailored to different
regions of the world where antibiotic resistance in TB is
common. Conkle-Gutierrez agrees.
“The practice
of going in and really looking for these unexplained cases,
bringing them in, sequencing them, is a large, expensive
project, but it needs to be done in order to find these rare
cases so that they don't slip through the cracks and spread,
causing more antibiotic resistance that just goes
undetected.”
As researchers learned during the
20th century, the widespread use of lifesaving antibiotics may
have transformed medicine, but bacterial pathogens, like M.
tuberculosis, quickly evolved resistance. That’s because
the strains of bacteria that survive the onslaught of these
powerful drugs harbor mutations that allow them to persist and
multiply in number. This is exacerbated by the use of
antibiotics in livestock and for non-bacterial infections in
humans, such as those caused by viruses.
Close to home
It’s estimated that about a quarter of the world’s population is infected with TB, which has two phases: latent and active. Most people stay in the latent phase, symptom-free and are not contagious, as their immune systems keep the bacterial load in check. . About 10% of those infections convert into active TB. Patients then experience symptoms and can spread the disease to others.
“It is a very important public health concern for the United States as well,” said Valafar, who says many people in this country have latent TB. “The fear is that other pulmonary infections like COVID could overwhelm the immune system and trigger TB to go into its active phase. If this happens, TB will become a bigger problem in the Western world as well. We have already seen this in HIV co-infections. (From 2020: COVID-19 Could Activate Latent Tuberculosis)”
Ultimately, an effective vaccine for TB is sorely needed. Until
then, improving molecular diagnostics for the detection of
antibiotic resistance is important for controlling morbidity. To
this end, Valafar’s lab has recently received another
grant from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases to directly sequence drug-resistant TB from infected
lung tissue.
“And that will really break
through some barriers that the tuberculosis research community
has been facing,” he said.
Source:
San Diego State University