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. 2000 Jun;4(6):491-5.

Pyrazinamide is not active against Mycobacterium tuberculosis residing in cultured human monocyte-derived macrophages

Affiliations
  • PMID: 10864178

Pyrazinamide is not active against Mycobacterium tuberculosis residing in cultured human monocyte-derived macrophages

L Heifets et al. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis. 2000 Jun.

Abstract

Setting: Mycobacteriology Laboratory, National Jewish Medical and Research Center, Denver, Colorado.

Objective: To evaluate the antimicrobial activity of pyrazinamide against Mycobacterium tuberculosis in cultured human monocyte-derived normal and activated macrophages.

Design: Monocytes separated from human blood were incubated in plastic plates for seven days to mature into macrophage monolayers. After activation with TNF-alpha or IFN-gamma or without prior treatment, the macrophages were infected with M. tuberculosis. Various concentrations of pyrazinamide (PZA), morphazinamide (MZA) or isoniazid (INH) were added the next day, and the viable counts of the intracellular bacteria were determined at days 0, 4, and 8.

Results: No inhibitory activity of PZA at any concentration was detected, while clear dose-dependent bacteriostatic and bactericidal activities were demonstrated by MZA and INH in the same experimental model.

Conclusions: PZA has neither bacteriostatic nor bactericidal activity against M. tuberculosis persisting or multiplying in cultured monocyte-derived human macrophages, and it might be that the well-known effectiveness of this drug in tuberculosis patients is not related to its supposed activity against intracellular bacterial subpopulations.

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