An Oral Fluorouracil Prodrug, Capecitabine, Mitigates a Gram-Positive Systemic Infection in Mice
J. McLeod, Pamela A. Harvey, Corrella S. Detweiler
Abstract
As bacterial infections become increasingly insensitive to antibiotics, whether established, off-patent drugs could treat infections becomes an important question. At the same time, basic research has revealed that during infection, mammals starve pathogens for nutrients and, in response, bacteria dramatically alter their biology. Therefore, it may be fruitful to search for drugs that could be repurposed as antibiotics using bacteria grown with limited nutrients. This approach, executed with undergraduate student researchers, identified nine drugs known to interfere with the production and/or function of DNA. We further explored one of these drugs, capecitabine, a well-tolerated human oncology drug. Oral administration of capecitabine reduced infection with the human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus and increased survival in mice. These data suggest that capecitabine has potential as a therapy for patients with otherwise untreatable bacterial infections.