Litcius/Paper detail

Defining Stage-Specific Activity of Potent New Inhibitors of Cryptosporidium parvum Growth <i>In Vitro</i>

Lisa J. Funkhouser-Jones, Soumya Ravindran, L. David Sibley

2020mBio53 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Currently, nitazoxanide is the only FDA-approved treatment for cryptosporidiosis; unfortunately, it is ineffective in immunocompromised patients, has varied efficacy in immunocompetent individuals, and is not approved in infants under 1 year of age. Identifying new inhibitors for the treatment of cryptosporidiosis requires standardized and quantifiable in vitro assays for assessing potency, selectivity, timing of activity, and reversibility. Here, we provide new protocols for defining which stages of the life cycle are susceptible to four highly active compound classes that likely inhibit different targets in the parasite. We also utilize a newly developed long-term culture system to define assays for monitoring reversibility as a means of defining cidal activity as a function of concentration and time of treatment. These assays should provide valuable in vitro parameters to establish conditions for efficacious in vivo treatment.

Topics & Concepts

NitazoxanideCryptosporidium parvumIn vivoIn vitroPotencyCryptosporidiumIn vitro toxicologyPharmacologyBiologyMedicineImmunologyMicrobiologyBiochemistryBiotechnologyFecesParasitic Infections and Diagnostics