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Completed NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

Lung-Protective Mechanisms of Metformin in TB

$6.38M USD

Funder NATIONAL HEART, LUNG, AND BLOOD INSTITUTE
Recipient Organization University of Massachusetts Med Sch Worcester
Country United States
Start Date Feb 05, 2021
End Date Jan 31, 2025
Duration 1,456 days
Number of Grantees 2
Roles Principal Investigator; Co-Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10556391
Grant Description

PROJECT SUMMARY Tuberculosis (TB), caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), remains a major global health threat. Challenges of compliance and toxicities of prolonged antimicrobial regimens and increasing drug resistance highlight the need for novel treatment approaches. Host-directed therapy (HDT) harnesses host-intrinsic

mechanisms using small molecule drugs to accelerate sterilization and limit lung damage caused by host immunity. We reported that metformin reduced lung bacterial load and immune pathology in Mtb-infected mice. Retrospective data from over half a million individuals treated for diabetes with metformin support the

HDT potential of this drug. These studies reported lower rates of Mtb infection and progression from latent to active TB, less cavitation and all-cause mortality, accelerated sputum conversion and less TB recurrence. The goal of this project is to discern the mechanisms of metformin HDT efficacy, focusing on inflammation

and fibrosis. Our preliminary data suggest that metformin expands non-classical Ly6Clo monocytes in an AMPK-dependent manner. These cells are essential for host protection in innate “trained” immunity and they participate in tissue repair. Ly6Clo monocytes produce CXCL10 that recruits CD8+CXCR3+ memory (TM) cells,

which may restrict Mtb replication in an antigen-specific and non-specific manner. Our data also suggest that metformin-mediated protection involves NOTCH pathway modulation, with suppression of NOTCH1 that drives fibrosis and enhancement of NOTCH2 to regulates Ly6Clo monocyte and CD8+ TM cell differentiation.

Experiments in Aim 1 will establish the requirement for AMPK and NOTCH signaling in the protective functions of metformin using the mouse aerosol TB model. Outcomes are lung bacterial load, immune pathology, lung tissue damage with collagen remodeling and transcriptomic and proteomic markers of fibrogenesis. Immunometabolic and epigenetic regulatory activities of metformin will be investigated in the

context of TB-HDT. Experiments in Aim 2 will establish the requirements for CD8+ TM cells and the CXCL10- CXCR3 axis in host protection and evaluate potential similarities and differences between metformin- educated CD8+ TM cells and virtual memory T cells. Both Aims include validation studies using alternative

mouse models (C3HeB/FeJ and Collaborative Cross) and de-identified human plasma, blood RNA and PBMC samples from clinical TB studies having participants with or without metformin exposure. This project will produce new knowledge about the mechanisms of metformin TB-HDT efficacy that will support the design

and interpretation of human clinical trials using metformin and might identify new targets for HDT agents having greater specificity, efficacy and tolerability than metformin.

All Grantees

University of Massachusetts Med Sch Worcester

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