Identification of Potential Sepsis Therapeutic Drugs Using a Zebrafish Rapid Screening Approach.

利用斑马鱼快速筛选方法鉴定潜在的脓毒症治疗药物

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作者:Widder Mark, Carbaugh Chance, van der Schalie William, Miller Ronald Jr, Brennan Linda, Moore Ashley, Campbell Robert, Akers Kevin, Ressner Roseanne, Martin Monica, Madejczyk Michael, Dancy Blair, Lee Patricia, Lanteri Charlotte
In the military, combat wound infections can progress rapidly to life-threatening sepsis. The discovery of effective small-molecule drugs to prevent and/or treat sepsis is a priority. To identify potential sepsis drug candidates, we used an optimized larval zebrafish model of endotoxicity/sepsis to screen commercial libraries of drugs approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and other active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) known to affect pathways implicated in the initiation and progression of sepsis in humans (i.e., inflammation, mitochondrial dysfunction, coagulation, and apoptosis). We induced endotoxicity in 3- and 5-day post fertilization larval zebrafish (characterized by mortality and tail fin edema (vascular leakage)) by immersion exposure to 60 µg/mL Pseudomonas aeruginosa lipopolysaccharide (LPS) for 24 h, then screened for the rescue potential of 644 selected drugs at 10 µM through simultaneous exposure to LPS. After LPS exposure, we used a neurobehavioral assay (light-dark test) to further evaluate rescue from endotoxicity and to determine possible off-target drug side effects. We identified 29 drugs with > 60% rescue of tail edema and mortality. Three drugs (Ketanserin, Tegaserod, and Brexpiprazole) produced 100% rescue and did not differ from the controls in the light-dark test, suggesting a lack of off-target neurobehavioral effects. Further testing of these three drugs at a nearly 100% lethal concentration of Klebsiella pneumoniae LPS (45 µg/mL) showed 100% rescue from mortality and 88-100% mitigation against tail edema. The success of the three identified drugs in a zebrafish endotoxicity/sepsis model warrants further evaluation in mammalian sepsis models.

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