key: cord-0929046-er5rs2o1 authors: Almeida-Paes, Rodrigo; de Andrade, Iara Bastos; Ramos, Mariana Lucy Mesquita; Rodrigues, Marcus Vinícius de Araújo; do Nascimento, Vinícius Alves; Bernardes-Engemann, Andréa Reis; Frases, Susana title: Medicines for Malaria Venture COVID Box: a source for repurposing drugs with antifungal activity against human pathogenic fungi date: 2021-11-08 journal: Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz DOI: 10.1590/0074-02760210207 sha: 5c016d24b21900792abbba5461e90b77e0228f31 doc_id: 929046 cord_uid: er5rs2o1 BACKGROUND: Treatment of mycoses is often ineffective, usually prolonged, and has some side effects. These facts highlight the importance of discovering new molecules to treat fungal infections. OBJECTIVES: To search the Medicines for Malaria Venture COVID Box for drugs with antifungal activity. METHODS: Fourteen human pathogenic fungi were tested against the 160 drugs of this collection at 1.0 µM concentration. We evaluated the ability of the drugs to impair fungal growth, their fungicidal nature, and morphological changes caused to cells. FINDINGS: Thirty-four molecules (21.25%) presented antifungal activity. Seven are antifungal drugs and one is the agricultural fungicide cycloheximide. The other drugs with antifungal activity included antibiotics (n = 3), antimalarials (n = 4), antivirals (n = 2), antiparasitcs (n = 3), antitumor agents (n = 5), nervous system agents (n = 3), immunosuppressants (n = 3), antivomiting (n = 1), antiasthmatic (n = 1), and a genetic disorder agent (n = 1). Several of these drugs inhibited Histoplasma capsulatum and Paracoccidioides brasiliensis growth (15 and 20, respectively), while Fusarium solani was not affected by the drugs tested. Most drugs were fungistatic, but niclosamide presented fungicidal activity against the three dimorphic fungi tested. Cyclosporine affected morphology of Cryptococcus neoformans. MAIN CONCLUSIONS: These drugs represent new alternatives to the development of more accessible and effective therapies to treat human fungal infections. brane. (9) Flucytosine is an antimetabolite agent that disrupts protein synthesis and must be used in combination with other antifungal drugs, due to the risk of acquired resistance. (10) The echinocandins were the last approved antifungal drug class that acts on the fungal cell-wall, inhibiting the biosynthesis of β-(1,3)-D-glucan. (11) Despite the increasing burden of worldwide fungal infections, the therapeutic arsenal to combat them has not expanded at the same rate. (12) In addition, the emergence of several species of drug resistant fungi complicates the management of mycoses with the currently available antifungal drugs. (13) In last years, few substances were approved as new antifungals and less than a dozen of antifungal agents are in clinical phases of development. (14) The process to develop new pharmaceutic substances is expensive and it can take up to 10 years for a drug to reach the pharmacies. Moreover, most of developed drugs never get approval for human use due to failures on any of the several phases of clinical studies. (15) All these difficulties on the development of new drugs became evident with the emergence of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-COV-2), the agent of the ongoing coronavirus disease 2019 (CO-VID- 19) pandemic. (16) To overcome them, several repurposing studies for this disease were proposed. (17) Drug repurposing is a method of drug development where substances already studied for other diseases, and often approved by some regulatory agencies, are redirected to treat a new disease or other medical conditions. (18) In this context, the Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV) initiative developed a collection of candidate molecules for COVID-19 repurposing (https://www.mmv.org/mmvopen/covid-box). MMV recommends a screening of the compounds at 1 µM and the confirmation of the activity of the compounds. For antifungal activity, minimal inhibitory and fungicidal concentrations, selectivity of the drug, and potential synergism with known antifungal drugs are usually tested. (19) Hospitalised patients infected with COVID-19 are at-risk for invasive fungal infections. (20) Moreover, there are reports of patients co-infected with SARS-COV-2 and some pulmonary endemic fungi (21, 22) or fungal agents of nosocomial pneumonia. (23, 24) Therefore, it would be advantageous the repurposing of drugs with potential SARS-COV-2 activity that are also effective against fungi that can complicate the evolution of COVID-19. The goal of this study was to search the MMV COVID Box for substances with antifungal activity against human pathogens and their effects on fungal growth and morphology. The Medicines for Malaria Venture COVID Box -The product development partnership Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV, Geneva, Switzerland) kindly supplied the drug collection COVID Box. It comprises 160 different substances, either marketed drugs or compounds under research/clinical development, from 19 distinct drug classes, with recognised or predicted activity against SARS-CoV-2. The Supplementary data I depicts a full list of molecules present in this drug collection. MMV provides the COVID Box as two 96-well plates containing 10 μL/well of 10 mM compound solutions in dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO), except for the compound piperaquine, which is provided at 2 mM. Dilutions of the drugs were performed to a final drug concentration of 1 mM using dimethylsulphoxide (Sigma-Aldrich, Co., St. Louis, MO, USA), as recommended by MMV. Columns 1 and 12 of each plate were used for negative (culture medium only) and positive (culture medium and inoculum) fungal growth controls, respectively. All plates were stored at −80ºC until their use in the experiments described below. Fungal strains and growth conditions -Fourteen different fungal species were tested against the substances present in the COVID Box. They comprise yeasts, moulds, as well as dimorphic fungi from the three major fungal phyla that cause human infections. Table I COVID Box screening for antifungal drugs -All compounds present in the MMV COVID Box were further diluted as recommended by the manufacturer for the screening against the above-mentioned fungi. We used a methodology, based on the Brazilian Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (BrCAST) guidelines for antifungal susceptibility, standardised by our group to test another MMV drug collection. (19) In brief, compounds were tested at a final concentration of 2 μM in 100 μL of RPMI 1640 medium, with phenol red, with L-glutamine, and without sodium bicarbonate (Sigma-Aldrich, Co), buffered with morpholine propanesulfonic acid (Vetec Química Fina Ltda, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil) at pH 7.0, and supplemented for a final 2% glucose (Neon Comercial Ltda). Diluted drugs were distributed in 96-well plates (Kasvi Ltda, São José dos Pinhais, PR, Brazil). For preparation of the fungal inoculum, the strains were grown as described above and then suspended in RPMI 1640 and vortexed, with the suspension adjusted to 1 × 10 6 cells/mL. This suspension was further diluted 1:10 in RPMI 1640 and then 100 μL of the fungal inoculum was added to each well containing the compounds, generating a final working inoculum density of 5 × 10 4 cells/mL, drug concentrations of 1 µM, and a final DMSO concentration of 0.5% in each well, including controls. Plates were incubated at 35ºC for 12-96 h, depending on the fungal species tested. Plates were visually inspected daily and, when sufficient fungal growth was observed in the control wells, all wells without fungal growth were recorded. The screening was performed in triplicate, and only drugs that consistently inhibited fungal growth on all experiments were considered as hits. Microscopic evaluation -Immediately after the identification of hit drugs as described above, 100 µL of each hit well was transferred to a microcentrifuge tube. Centrifugation was conducted in an Eppendorf 5415C centrifuge at 5,000 g for 10 minutes. Pellets were suspended in 10 µL lactophenol cotton blue (Sigma-Aldrich) and observed under a light microscope at 1,000 magnification. The same procedure was repeated in control wells, without addition of drugs. Fungal morphology in hit wells was compared with the morphology of the fungus grown in control wells. Fungicidal activity -To check whether the hit drugs only inhibited fungal growth or killed the fungi, immediately after the identification of hit drugs as described above, 5 µL of each hit well were subcultured on Sab-ouraud dextrose agar and incubated at 25ºC until 21 days, when we checked for fungal growth in the plates. If the plates presented fungal growth, the hit drug was classified as fungistatic. If no fungal growth was detected, hit drugs were classified as fungicidal. This experiment was performed in triplicate, and only drugs that consistently killed the fungi in all tests were considered fungicidal. Time kill assay -Selected drugs with fungicidal activity were used in this assay. Fungal inocula were prepared at 1 × 10 4 cells/mL in RPMI 1640, pH 7.0, as described above. Drugs were added at a 1 µM concentration and cultures were incubated at 35ºC. Control conditions consisted in the same fungal inoculum in RPMI 1640 supplemented with 0.5% DMSO, the same concentration present in test cultures. Colony forming unit (CFU) counts were performed immediately after inoculum and drug mixture, as well as after 6, 24, 48, 72, and 96 h of incubation, through 10-fold serial dilutions in phosphate buffered saline of the fungal cultures supplemented or not with the drugs tested. Time-kill curves were generated using the GraphPad Prism 8.4.2 software and comparisons between control and test curves were performed using the Student t-test. Literature investigation -Original, peer-reviewed articles, published in English, Portuguese, or Spanish up to December 31st, 2020 were searched in the PubMed database (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/) to check whether the hit molecules detected in this study presented described antifungal activity against other fungal species not included here. The search strategy consisted in the combination of the trivial name of the hit drugs with the expressions "antifungal activity" or "fungus". Known antifungal drugs used to treat patients with mycoses were not included in this investigation. The re-sulting articles were reviewed and papers without clear methodologies of drug repurposing approaches against fungi were excluded. The MMV COVID Box has drugs presenting antifungal activity -Among the 160 substances present in the MMV COVID Box, 34 were able to inhibit the growth of at least one of the studied fungi. Fig. 1 shows the distribution of drugs with antifungal activity according to their original indication. Seven of these active substances are known antifungal drugs (ketoconazole, itraconazole, ravuconazole, terconazole, posaconazole, fluconazole, and anidulafungin) and one is the agricultural fungicide cycloheximide. The other drugs presenting antifungal activity included three antibiotics; four antimalarials; two antivirals, one of them with anti-HIV activity; three antiparasitc agents, five antitumor agents, two of them used to treat leukemia; three nervous system agents with antipsychotic, antispasmodic, or anti-schizophrenia properties; three pharmaceutical immune agents with immunosuppressant properties; one gastrointestinal agent with antivomiting properties; one respiratory system agent with antiasthmatic properties; and one genetic disorder agent used to treat Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome. Fig. 2 shows the susceptibility of the 14 studied fungi against the 34 drugs that presented antifungal activity during the screening of the MMV COVID Box, according to their drug class. Briefly, the dimorphic endemic fungi H. capsulatum and P. brasiliensis were the most susceptible fungi. They were inhibited by 15 and 20 different drugs, respectively. The yeast Candida krusei and the filamentous dematiaceous fungus Fonsecaea pedrosoi were inhibited only by antifungal drugs. The filamentous fungi Fusarium solani was not inhibited by any of the studied substances at 1 µM, even the antifungal drugs presented in the studied collection. Most of MMV COVID Box effective drugs are fungistatic - Fig. 3 shows the hit drugs detected in the current study, together with their fungistatic, fungicidal or inactive nature against the 14 human pathogenic fungi included in this study. Niclosamide was fungicidal against the three dimorphic fungi tested. The three antibiotics with antifungal activity (salinomycin, anisomycin, and doxycycline) were effective only against P. brasiliensis, while the two antivirals detected as hits were only ac-tive against H. capsulatum, both also presenting fungistatic activity against this species. The antimalarial drug lumefantrine was fungistatic only against the mucormycete Rhyzopus oryzae, while another antimalaric drug, N-Desethylamodiaquine, presented fungistatic activity against Neoscytalidium hyalinum, which was also the only fungus inhibited by the antiasthmatic drug ciclesonide. Different drugs, thiethylperazine and rapamycin, inhibited its closest relative Neoscytalidium dimidiatum. In fact, immunosuppressive drugs, especially rapamycin, were fungistatic against most studied fungi. Cyclosporine affects Cryptococcus neoformans morphology -In general, the hit drugs did not affect fungal morphology, since morphologies in hit wells were similar to that observed in control wells for all drug/fungus combinations, except for cyclosporine and C. neoformans. In the presence of this immunosuppressant drug, C. neoformans loses its regular spherical morphology and presents with an irregular surface (Fig. 4) . Fungicidal drugs differentially affect the dimorphic fungi -To check whether the fungicidal effects of niclosamide were similar among the three dimorphic fungi, time kill curves of H. capsulatum, P. brasiliensis, and S. brasiliensis in the presence of this drug were constructed. After six hours of incubation with niclosamide, H. capsulatum and P. brasiliensis were completely killed by the drug, while for S. brasiliensis, fungal cells were slowly killed during 96 h of incubation with this drug (Fig. 5A ). An additional time-kill curve of H. capsulatum with midostaurin, another fungicidal hit drug against this fungus. Contrary to niclosamide, midostaurin-induced H. capsulatum killing was slow, taking 72 h to present complete fungal killing (Fig. 5B) . Reports of antifungal activity of hit molecules -A literature search revealed 68 studies (Supplementary data II) reporting antifungal activity for the non-antifungal drugs herein identified as hits. Among the 26 hit drugs with off-label antifungal activity detected in the present study, eight (30.8%) already were described as able to inhibit fungal growth: cyclosporine, tacrolimus, rapamycin, doxycycline, salinomycin, niclosamide, lonafarnib, and oxyclozanide. Therefore, to the best of our knowledge, 18 drugs are herein described as presenting antifungal activity for the first time: anisomycin, halofantrine, ferroquine, N-desethylamodiaquine, lumefantrine, emetine, dapivirine, GSK 983, pexidartinib, JQ1, amuvatinib, midostaurin, ponatinib, thiethylperazine, SAX 187, drotaverine, fluspirilene, and ciclesonide. Fig. 6 shows the number of studies describing the susceptibility of 23 groups/species of fungi against these drugs. Thirty-nine studies presented minimal inhibitory concentrations for these drugs against planktonic fungal cells (Table II) . It is interesting to note that 46 studies (67.6%) report synergism between these candidate repurposed drugs and other molecules, mostly approved antifungal drugs used in the treatment of human patients. The difficulties in the treatment of fungal infections with the current approved antifungal drugs, (13) the paucity of therapeutic options for patients with COV-ID-19, (25) and several reports of SARS-COV-2 and human pathogenic fungi co-infections (23, 24, 26, 27) make drug repurposing against both COVID-19 and mycoses an interesting approach. The strategy used in this study, a screening of a drug collection of drugs with supposed action against SARS-CoV-2, against a large collection of pathogenic fungi, lead to the discovery of 34 molecules that can be theoretically used to treat both infections. Eighteen of them were never described as active against pathogenic fungi. The most susceptible fungi against the drugs present in the MMV COVID Box at 1 µM were P. brasiliensis and H. capsulatum. A higher susceptibility of P. brasiliensis compared with other fungal species was also observed when a panel of fungi was tested against the natural product curcumin. (28) Some drugs have been described with antifungal activity against P. brasiliensis, including cyclosporin A. (29) This last drug also presented antifungal activity against this species in the present study. Currently, paracoccidioidomycosis, the infection caused by P. brasiliensis, can be treated with a repurposed drug, the antibiotic co-trimoxazole, (30) and in this study, three other antibiotics presented anti-P. brasilien- sis activity. In fact, only this fungal species was affected by antibiotics presented in the MMV COVID Box. In addition, only H. capsulatum was susceptible to some antiviral drugs present in the MMV COVID Box. Interestingly, the anti-Histoplasma activity of the antivirals saquinavir and ritonavir was previously described. (31) A new group of at-risk patients for invasive fungal infections has emerged with the COVID-19 pandemia. (20) In fact, co-infections with SARS-CoV-2 and human pathogenic fungi such as those of the genus Aspergillus, (24) Candida, (26) Fusarium, (23) Rhyzopus, (27) among others, are reported. Unfortunately, the drugs of the MMV COVID Box did not affect most of the fungi belonging to these genera in this study. Fusarium species, in particular, are intrinsically resistant to most antifungal drugs and commonly acquire resistance in the clinical setting. (32) Therefore, the results of this study confirm the resistance profile of this genus not only against traditional antifungals, but also against a large panel of bioactive drugs. Mucormycosis agents, including R. oryzae, are also inherent resistant to several antifungal drugs. (33) In this study, the antimalarial lumefantrine presented fun-gistatic activity against R. oryzae. This is an aryl-amino alcohol that probably interferes with byproduct detoxification of heme degradation. Interestingly, this mucormycete is inhibited by haemofungin, a compound that also interferes with heme metabolism. (34) As demonstrated by our literature search, it is well known that Candida albicans is highly inhibited by a series of drugs presented in the MMV COVID Box. This was the reason why we choose other less studied Candida species to use in the experiments of this study. Candida krusei is intrinsically resistant to fluconazole, (35) while Candida haemulonii is a poorly studied, multidrug-resistant emerging pathogen. (36) Candida parapsilosis, on the other hand, is traditionally susceptible to antifungal drugs, but present increasing rates of fluconazole resistance in last decades. (37) Except for the antifungal drugs present in the MMV COVID Box, only rapamycin was able to inhibit C. parapsilosis and C. haemulonii growth at the concentration suggested by the manufacturer for the screening. This drug acts against Mucor circinelloides in a mechanism dependent on the FKBP12-inhibition of the TOR pathway. (38) The inhibition of this signaling pathway appears to be the mechanism of action of this drug and its analogs, such as cyclosporin A and tacrolimus, against Candida and Aspergillus. (39) Rapamycin, together with tacrolimus, was also able to inhibit Aspergillus fumigatus in the present study. Both are immunosuppressive drugs, which are molecules with known in vitro antifungal activity. However, the impairment these drugs cause in the host surpasses their antifungal activity, since patients that use these immunosuppressive drugs usually develop severe forms of fungal infections. (40) Therefore, they cannot be used systemically to treat fungal infections. Repurposing of immunosuppressive drugs to treat fungal infections must involve the use of topic formulations to be used in sites where the immune response is not likely to have an impact on fungal pathogenesis, such as a rapamycin solution in a nail polish vehicle for Neoscytalidium onychomycosis, or the chemical modification of these molecules, yielding compounds retaining antifungal activity but with little or no activity against the host immune system. Most of the drugs with antifungal activity identified for the first time in this study present fungistatic activity. Azoles, the currently most used antifungal class to treat human fungal infections, acting on ergosterol biosynthesis, (9) are also fungistatic against most pathogenic fungi. (41) The lack of morphological changes caused by hit drugs with off-label antifungal activity in the fungi studied may indicate mechanisms of action not associated with cellular apoptosis, lysis or disruption, which is in accordance with the fungistatic nature of most hit drugs discussed before. In addition, fungi were able to grow when subcultured in drug-free media after incubation with most tested drugs, including the ones with new descriptions of antifungal activity. Niclosamide was identified in this study as fungicidal against dimorphic fungi. The mechanisms of action of this drug against cancer, bacterial, viral, and metabolic diseases include uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation and modulation of Wnt/β-catenin, NF-κB, STAT3, mTORC1, and Notch signaling pathways. (42) Niclosamide is an anti-helminthic drug with a short half-life and low bioavailability, which impairs their use to treat systemic infections such as histoplasmosis and paracoccidioidomycosis. However, due to its broad spectrum of activity against viruses, bacteria, and cancer cells, nanotechnology and pro-drug approaches are in development, (42) which may represent a new option to treat mycoses caused by endemic dimorphic fungi. Other limitations related to the pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, or contraindications of drugs with antifungal activity presented in the COVID Box include low bioavailability (especially for niclosamide, drotaverine, and ciclesonide), reproductive toxicity (for midostaurin and lonafarnib), central nervous system toxicity (thiethylperazine), or pregnancy contraindication (especially for doxycycline, pexidartinib, and lonafarnib). Chemical modification or nanotechnology approaches with these drugs are encouraged for possible future clinical trials against mycotic infections with these drugs. It is interesting to note that some drugs present in the MMV COVID Box have published data reporting an antifungal activity that was not detected in the current study. These include cyclosporine and tacrolimus activity against C. krusei (43) and S. brasiliensis (44) as well as niclosamide activity against C. neoformans. (45) These differences may be related to different susceptibility profiles of the strains used, differences in drug concentrations in the assays, or differences in the methodology for drug repurposing screening. In addition, doxycycline synergistic activity with antifungal drugs was observed with Fusarium spp., (46) C. krusei, and C. parapsilosis. (47) The mechanism of action of this synergistic effect appears to be related to an interference with iron homeostasis. (48) Further studies of synergism between the drugs present in the MMV COVID Box and the currently used antifungal drugs may reveal new molecules with potential antifungal activity. The number of strains of each species included in this study is indeed a limitation of the work. Since one strain of each species was tested, we cannot discard the possibility of individual strain susceptibility bias. This is particularly true for drugs presenting antifungal activity against a single fungal species, such as ciclesonide (active only against N. hyalinum) or fluspirilene (active only against H. capsulatum). Another limitation was the use of a single concentration of drugs for screening, as recommended by the manufacturer of the COVID Box. This may have led to the discard of some molecules with potential antifungal activity, since drug concentrations are critical to their fungicidal nature as well as to affect fungal growth and morphology. Further pre-clinical studies involving testing of the antifungal activity of the herein described drugs with a large number of strains and at different concentrations are necessary. In conclusion, this work has revealed new drugs with off-label antifungal activity to serve as alternatives to the development of more accessible and effective therapies to treat human fungal infections. Unfortunately, we were not able to identify a drug with a broad-spectrum of action against several fungi. In the future, studies to enhance drug bioavailability, to reduce immunosuppressive effect of drugs while maintaining their antifungal activity, and to combine drugs should be performed with the hit drugs identified in this study. The spectrum of fungi that infects humans Emerging and reemerging fungal infections The hidden pathogenic potential of environmental fungi Sporothrix schenckii complex biology: environment and fungal pathogenicity Emerging fungal infections: new patients, new patterns, and new pathogens Neglected endemic mycoses Antifungal drugs: what brings the future? 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In vitro synergism Enhancement of the in vitro activity of amphotericin B against the biofilms of non-albicans Candida spp. by rifampicin and doxycycline Potent synergistic effect of doxycycline with fluconazole against Candida albicans is mediated by interference with iron homeostasis RA-P and SF conceived and designed the experiments; IAB, MLMR, MVAR, VAN and ARB-E performed the experiments; RA-P, IAB, ARB-E and SF analysed the data; RA-P and SF -drafting the work and revising it critically for important intellectual content.