Affiliation:
1. Department of Biology, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Therapeutic treatment for systemic mycoses is severely hampered by the extremely limited number of antifungals. The difficulty of treatment of fungal infections in the central nervous system is further compounded by the poor central nervous system (CNS) penetration of most antifungals due to the blood-brain barrier. Only a few fungistatic azole drugs, such as fluconazole, show reasonable CNS penetration. Here we demonstrate that sertraline (Zoloft), the most frequently prescribed antidepressant, displays potent antifungal activity against
Cryptococcus neoformans
, the major causative agent of fungal meningitis. In
in vitro
assays, this neurotropic drug is fungicidal to all natural
Cryptococcus
isolates tested at clinically relevant concentrations. Furthermore, sertraline interacts synergistically or additively with fluconazole against
Cryptococcus
. Importantly, consistent with our
in vitro
observations, sertraline used alone reduces the brain fungal burden at an efficacy comparable to that of fluconazole in a murine model of systemic cryptococcosis. It works synergistically with fluconazole in reducing the fungal burden in brain, kidney, and spleen. In contrast to its potency against
Cryptococcus
, sertraline is less effective against strains of
Candida
species and its interactions with fluconazole against
Candida
strains are often antagonistic. Therefore, our data suggest the unique application of sertraline against cryptococcosis. To understand the antifungal mechanisms of sertraline, we screened a whole-genome deletion collection of
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
for altered sertraline susceptibility. Gene ontology analyses of selected mutations suggest that sertraline perturbs translation.
In vitro
translation assays using fungal cell extracts show that sertraline inhibits protein synthesis. Taken together, our findings indicate the potential of adopting this antidepressant in treating cryptococcal meningitis.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
Cited by
160 articles.
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