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Dive into the research topics where Matthew Zimmerman is active.

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Featured researches published by Matthew Zimmerman.


Nature Medicine | 2015

The association between sterilizing activity and drug distribution into tuberculosis lesions.

Brendan Prideaux; Laura E. Via; Matthew Zimmerman; Seok-Yong Eum; Jansy Sarathy; Paul O'Brien; Chao Chen; Firat Kaya; Danielle M. Weiner; Pei Yu Chen; Taeksun Song; Myungsun Lee; Tae Sun Shim; Jeong Su Cho; Wooshik Kim; Sang-Nae Cho; Kenneth N. Olivier; Clifton E. Barry; Véronique Dartois

Finding new treatment-shortening antibiotics to improve cure rates and curb the alarming emergence of drug resistance is the major objective of tuberculosis (TB) drug development. Using a matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry imaging suite in a biosafety containment facility, we show that the key sterilizing drugs rifampicin and pyrazinamide efficiently penetrate the sites of TB infection in lung lesions. Rifampicin even accumulates in necrotic caseum, a critical lesion site where persisting tubercle bacilli reside. In contrast, moxifloxacin, which is active in vitro against a subpopulation of Mycobacterium tuberculosis that persists in specific niches under drug pressure and has achieved treatment shortening in mice, does not diffuse well in caseum, concordant with its failure to shorten therapy in recent clinical trials. We suggest that such differential spatial distribution and kinetics of accumulation in lesions may create temporal and spatial windows of monotherapy in specific niches, allowing the gradual development of multidrug-resistant TB. We propose an alternative working model to prioritize new antibiotic regimens based on quantitative and spatial distribution of TB drugs in the major lesion types found in human lungs. The finding that lesion penetration may contribute to treatment outcome has wide implications for TB.


ACS Infectious Diseases | 2016

Bedaquiline and Pyrazinamide Treatment Responses Are Affected by Pulmonary Lesion Heterogeneity in Mycobacterium tuberculosis Infected C3HeB/FeJ Mice.

Scott M. Irwin; Brendan Prideaux; Edward R. Lyon; Matthew Zimmerman; Elizabeth J. Brooks; Christopher Schrupp; Chao Chen; Matthew J. Reichlen; Bryce C. Asay; Martin I. Voskuil; Eric L. Nuermberger; Koen Andries; Michael A. Lyons; Véronique Dartois; Anne J. Lenaerts

BALB/c and Swiss mice are routinely used to validate the effectiveness of tuberculosis drug regimens, although these mouse strains fail to develop human-like pulmonary granulomas exhibiting caseous necrosis. Microenvironmental conditions within human granulomas may negatively impact drug efficacy, and this may not be reflected in non-necrotizing lesions found within conventional mouse models. The C3HeB/FeJ mouse model has been increasingly utilized as it develops hypoxic, caseous necrotic granulomas which may more closely mimic the pathophysiological conditions found within human pulmonary granulomas. Here, we examined the treatment response of BALB/c and C3HeB/FeJ mice to bedaquiline (BDQ) and pyrazinamide (PZA) administered singly and in combination. BALB/c mice consistently displayed a highly uniform treatment response to both drugs, while C3HeB/FeJ mice displayed a bimodal response composed of responsive and less-responsive mice. Plasma pharmacokinetic analysis of dissected lesions from BALB/c and C3HeB/FeJ mice revealed that PZA penetrated lesion types from both mouse strains with similar efficiency. However, the pH of the necrotic caseum of C3HeB/FeJ granulomas was determined to be 7.5, which is in the range where PZA is essentially ineffective under standard laboratory in vitro growth conditions. BDQ preferentially accumulated within the highly cellular regions in the lungs of both mouse strains, although it was present at reduced but still biologically relevant concentrations within the central caseum when dosed at 25 mg/kg. The differential treatment response which resulted from the heterogeneous pulmonary pathology in the C3HeB/FeJ mouse model revealed several factors which may impact treatment efficacy, and could be further evaluated in clinical trials.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2015

A Sterilizing Tuberculosis Treatment Regimen Is Associated with Faster Clearance of Bacteria in Cavitary Lesions in Marmosets

Laura E. Via; Kathleen England; Danielle M. Weiner; Daniel Schimel; Matthew Zimmerman; Emmanuel Dayao; Ray Y. Chen; Lori E. Dodd; Mike Richardson; Katherine K. Robbins; Ying Cai; Dima A. Hammoud; Peter Herscovitch; Véronique Dartois; JoAnne L. Flynn; Clifton E. Barry

ABSTRACT Shortening the lengthy treatment duration for tuberculosis patients is a major goal of current drug development efforts. The common marmoset develops human-like disease pathology and offers an attractive model to better understand the basis for relapse and test regimens for effective shorter duration therapy. We treated Mycobacterium tuberculosis-infected marmosets with two drug regimens known to differ in their relapse rates in human clinical trials: the standard four-drug combination of isoniazid, rifampin, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol (HRZE) that has very low relapse rates and the combination of isoniazid and streptomycin that is associated with higher relapse rates. As early as 2 weeks, the more sterilizing regimen significantly reduced the volume of lung disease by computed tomography (P = 0.035) and also significantly reduced uptake of [18F]-2-fluoro-2-deoxyglucose by positron emission tomography (P = 0.049). After 6 weeks of therapy, both treatments caused similar reductions in granuloma bacterial load, but the more sterilizing, four-drug regimen caused greater reduction in bacterial load in cavitary lesions (P = 0.009). These findings, combined with the association in humans between cavitary disease and relapse, suggest that the basis for improved sterilizing activity of the four-drug combination is both its faster disease volume resolution and its stronger sterilizing effect on cavitary lesions. Definitive data from relapse experiments are needed to support this observation.


Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2016

Statin adjunctive therapy shortens the duration of TB treatment in mice

Noton K. Dutta; Natalie Bruiners; Michael L. Pinn; Matthew Zimmerman; Brendan Prideaux; Véronique Dartois; Maria Laura Gennaro; Petros C. Karakousis

BACKGROUND The repurposing of existing agents may accelerate TB drug development. Recently, we reported that the lipid-lowering drug simvastatin, when added to the first-line antitubercular regimen, reduces the lung bacillary burden in chronically infected mice. OBJECTIVES We investigated whether the addition of simvastatin to the first-line regimen (isoniazid/rifampicin/pyrazinamide) shortens the duration of curative TB treatment in mice. METHODS Mycobacterium tuberculosis-infected THP-1 cells were exposed to simvastatin to determine the effect of statins on the activity of first-line anti-TB drug activity and intracellular rifampicin concentration. Single-dose and steady-state pharmacokinetic studies guided optimized simvastatin dosing in vivo. BALB/c mice were aerosol-infected with M. tuberculosis H37Rv and drug treatment was initiated 6 weeks post-infection. Separate groups of mice received standard TB treatment with or without simvastatin. Relapse rates were assessed 3 months after discontinuation of each treatment regimen. MALDI-MS imaging was used to image the cholesterol content of mouse lung lesions. RESULTS Simvastatin significantly enhanced the bactericidal activity of first-line drugs against intracellular M. tuberculosis without altering intracellular rifampicin concentrations. Adjunctive treatment with 60 mg/kg simvastatin shortened the time required to achieve culture-negative lungs from 4.5 to 3.5 months. Following 2.5, 3.5 and 4.5 months of treatment, relapse rates were 100%, 50% and 0%, respectively, in the control group and 50% (P = 0.03), 20% and 0%, respectively, in the statin group. Simvastatin did not alter plasma or lung lesion cholesterol levels. CONCLUSIONS Statins are attractive candidates for host-directed, adjunctive TB therapy. Further preclinical studies are needed to define the optimal statin and dosing.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2017

Ethambutol partitioning in tuberculous pulmonary lesions explains its clinical efficacy

Matthew Zimmerman; Jodi Lestner; Brendan Prideaux; Paul O'Brien; Isabela Dias-Freedman; Chao Chen; Jillian Dietzold; Isaac Daudelin; Firat Kaya; Landry Blanc; Pei-Yu Chen; Steven Park; Padmini Salgame; Jansy Sarathy; Véronique Dartois

ABSTRACT Clinical trials and practice have shown that ethambutol is an important component of the first-line tuberculosis (TB) regime. This contrasts the drugs rather modest potency and lack of activity against nongrowing persister mycobacteria. The standard plasma-based pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic profile of ethambutol suggests that the drug may be of limited clinical value. Here, we hypothesized that this apparent contradiction may be explained by favorable penetration of the drug into TB lesions. First, we utilized novel in vitro lesion pharmacokinetic assays and predicted good penetration of the drug into lesions. We then employed mass spectrometry imaging and laser capture microdissection coupled to liquid chromatography and tandem mass spectrometry (LCM and LC/MS-MS, respectively) to show that ethambutol, indeed, accumulates in diseased tissues and penetrates the major human-like lesion types represented in the rabbit model of TB disease with a lesion-to-plasma exposure ratio ranging from 9 to 12. In addition, ethambutol exhibits slow but sustained passive diffusion into caseum to reach concentrations markedly higher than those measured in plasma at steady state. The results explain why ethambutol has retained its place in the first-line regimen, validate our in vitro lesion penetration assays, and demonstrate the critical importance of effective lesion penetration for anti-TB drugs. Our findings suggest that in vitro and in vivo lesion penetration evaluation should be included in TB drug discovery programs. Finally, this is the first time that LCM with LC-MS/MS has been used to quantify a small molecule at high spatial resolution in infected tissues, a method that can easily be extended to other infectious diseases.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Novel Cephalosporins Selectively Active on Nonreplicating Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Ben Gold; Robert A. Smith; Quyen Nguyen; Julia Roberts; Yan Ling; Landys Lopez Quezada; Selin Somersan; Thulasi Warrier; David Little; Maneesh Pingle; David Zhang; Elaine Ballinger; Matthew Zimmerman; Véronique Dartois; Paul R. Hanson; Lester A. Mitscher; Patrick Porubsky; Steven A. Rogers; Frank J. Schoenen; Carl Nathan; Jeffrey Aubé

We report two series of novel cephalosporins that are bactericidal to Mycobacterium tuberculosis alone of the pathogens tested, which only kill M. tuberculosis when its replication is halted by conditions resembling those believed to pertain in the host, and whose bactericidal activity is not dependent upon or enhanced by clavulanate, a β-lactamase inhibitor. The two classes of cephalosporins bear an ester or alternatively an oxadiazole isostere at C-2 of the cephalosporin ring system, a position that is almost exclusively a carboxylic acid in clinically used agents in the class. Representatives of the series kill M. tuberculosis within macrophages without toxicity to the macrophages or other mammalian cells.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2018

Spatial Quantification of Drugs in Pulmonary Tuberculosis Lesions by Laser Capture Microdissection Liquid Chromatography Mass Spectrometry (LCM-LC/MS)

Matthew Zimmerman; Landry Blanc; Pei-Yu Chen; Véronique Dartois; Brendan Prideaux

Tuberculosis is still a leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Improvements to existing drug regimens and the development of novel therapeutics are urgently required. The ability of dosed TB drugs to reach and sterilize bacteria within poorly-vascularized necrotic regions (caseum) of pulmonary granulomas is crucial for successful therapeutic intervention. Effective therapeutic regimens must therefore contain drugs with favorable caseum penetration properties. Current LC/MS methods for quantifying drug levels in biological tissues have limited spatial resolution capabilities, making it difficult to accurately determine absolute drug concentrations within small tissue compartments such as those found within necrotic granulomas. Here we present a protocol combining laser capture microdissection (LCM) of pathologically-distinct tissue regions with LC/MS quantification. This technique provides absolute quantification of drugs within granuloma caseum, surrounding cellular lesion and uninvolved lung tissue and, therefore, accurately determines whether bactericidal concentrations are being achieved. In addition to tuberculosis research, the technique has many potential applications for spatially-resolved quantification of drugs in diseased tissues.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2017

Whole cell screen of fragment library identifies gut microbiota metabolite indole propionic acid as antitubercular

Dereje A. Negatu; Joe J. J. Liu; Matthew Zimmerman; Firat Kaya; Véronique Dartois; Courtney C. Aldrich; Martin Gengenbacher; Thomas Dick

ABSTRACT Several key antituberculosis drugs, including pyrazinamide, with a molecular mass of 123.1 g/mol, are smaller than the usual drug-like molecules. Current drug discovery efforts focus on the screening of larger compounds with molecular masses centered around 400 to 500 g/mol. Fragment (molecular mass < 300 g/mol) libraries have not been systematically explored for antitubercular activity. Here we screened a collection of 1,000 fragments, present in the Maybridge Ro3 library, for whole-cell activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Twenty-nine primary hits showed dose-dependent growth inhibition equal to or better than that of pyrazinamide. The most potent hit, indole propionic acid [IPA; 3-(1H-indol-3-yl)propanoic acid], a metabolite produced by the gut microbiota, was profiled in vivo. The molecule was well tolerated in mice and showed adequate pharmacokinetic properties. In a mouse model of acute M. tuberculosis infection, IPA reduced the bacterial load in the spleen 7-fold. Our results suggest that IPA should be evaluated as an add-on to current regimens and that fragment libraries should be further explored to identify antimycobacterial lead candidates.


Science Translational Medicine | 2018

Targeting protein biotinylation enhances tuberculosis chemotherapy

Divya Tiwari; Sae Woong Park; Maram M. Essawy; Surendra Dawadi; Alan Mason; Madhumitha Nandakumar; Matthew Zimmerman; Marizel Mina; Hsin Pin Ho; Curtis A. Engelhart; Thomas R. Ioerger; James C. Sacchettini; Kyu Y. Rhee; Sabine Ehrt; Courtney C. Aldrich; Véronique Dartois; Dirk Schnappinger

Inhibitors of biotin protein ligase and protein biotinylation in Mycobacterium tuberculosis act synergistically with the drug rifampicin, potentially shortening tuberculosis treatment. A new drug target for combatting TB Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) is the causative agent of tuberculosis (TB). The paucity of validated drug targets limits efforts to develop new drugs to combat TB. New work by Tiwari et al. establishes bacterial biotin protein ligase (BPL), the enzyme Mtb requires to covalently attach the essential vitamin biotin to biotin-dependent enzymes, as an alternative frontline target in the development of drugs against TB. These investigators demonstrated that inactivation of BPL killed Mtb in vitro and eradicated this pathogen from infected mice. Inhibition of protein biotinylation increased the potency of the frontline TB drug rifampicin both in vitro and during infection of mice. Successful drug treatment for tuberculosis (TB) depends on the unique contributions of its component drugs. Drug resistance poses a threat to the efficacy of individual drugs and the regimens to which they contribute. Biologically and chemically validated targets capable of replacing individual components of current TB chemotherapy are a major unmet need in TB drug development. We demonstrate that chemical inhibition of the bacterial biotin protein ligase (BPL) with the inhibitor Bio-AMS (5′-[N-(d-biotinoyl)sulfamoyl]amino-5′-deoxyadenosine) killed Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), the bacterial pathogen causing TB. We also show that genetic silencing of BPL eliminated the pathogen efficiently from mice during acute and chronic infection with Mtb. Partial chemical inactivation of BPL increased the potency of two first-line drugs, rifampicin and ethambutol, and genetic interference with protein biotinylation accelerated clearance of Mtb from mouse lungs and spleens by rifampicin. These studies validate BPL as a potential drug target that could serve as an alternate frontline target in the development of new drugs against Mtb.


PLOS Pathogens | 2018

Matrix metalloproteinase inhibitors enhance the efficacy of frontline drugs against Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Yitian Xu; Lihua Wang; Matthew Zimmerman; Kai-Yuan Chen; Lu Huang; Dah-Jiun Fu; Firat Kaya; Nikolai Rakhilin; Evgeniya V. Nazarova; Pengcheng Bu; Véronique Dartois; David G. Russell; Xiling Shen

Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) remains a grave threat to world health with emerging drug resistant strains. One prominent feature of Mtb infection is the extensive reprogramming of host tissue at the site of infection. Here we report that inhibition of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) activity by a panel of small molecule inhibitors enhances the in vivo potency of the frontline TB drugs isoniazid (INH) and rifampicin (RIF). Inhibition of MMP activity leads to an increase in pericyte-covered blood vessel numbers and appears to stabilize the integrity of the infected lung tissue. In treated mice, we observe an increased delivery and/or retention of frontline TB drugs in the infected lungs, resulting in enhanced drug efficacy. These findings indicate that targeting Mtb-induced host tissue remodeling can increase therapeutic efficacy and could enhance the effectiveness of current drug regimens.

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Clifton E. Barry

National Institutes of Health

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Danielle M. Weiner

National Institutes of Health

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Laura E. Via

National Institutes of Health

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