Tuberculosis (TB) is an infectious disease that typically affects the lungs. Current therapies include a panel of antibiotics given over a range of 6-9 months. As a result of the expense of treatment, the extended timeframe needed for effective treatment, and the scarcity of medicines in some developing countries, patient compliance with TB treatment is very low and results in multi-drug resistant TB (MDR-TB). There remains a need for a faster, more effective treatment for TB.
Short, metabolically stable, cell-penetrating lipopeptide mimics of conserved regions of IL-10 and STAT3 inhibit those proteins’ signaling to become a host-directed therapy against TB. Intrapulmonary aerosol delivery of the peptides results in increased bactericidal capacity of the host immune system (e.g., increased nitric oxide, NADPH oxidase, lysozyme activities).
Researchers at the National Cancer Institute's Cancer and Inflammation Program developed peptide inhibitors of the STAT3-IL10 pathway, and are studying the peptide inhibitors use in treating bacterial infection. The inventors have shown that the inhibitors can reduce the Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) bacterial load by >90% in mice, without the use of antibiotics in two weeks. The inhibitors modulate the host’s lung immune response, enhancing its bactericidal capacity. The inventors would be pleased to enter into collaborations, particularly those that explore efficacy against multi-drug resistant Mtb, and/or combination with traditional antibiotics in hopes of shortening treatment time.
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