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Home NEWS Science News Health

Tuspetinib Boosts Polymyxin B by Blocking Enzyme

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
April 10, 2026
in Health
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In recent years, the global medical community has been grappling with one of the most formidable challenges in public health: antibiotic resistance. The alarming rise of multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacteria has not only complicated treatment protocols but also jeopardized the efficacy of antibiotics once deemed reliable. Among the pantheon of antibiotics, polymyxin B (PMB) has long stood as a last-resort agent, predominantly targeting Gram-negative bacteria that resist standard therapies. However, its clinical utility has been considerably hampered by a well-documented nephrotoxic profile, limiting dosage and duration in patients already burdened by critical infections.

Against this backdrop, innovative strategies that can potentiate the antibacterial action of PMB while mitigating its risks are highly sought after. In a breakthrough study set to redefine the landscape of MDR bacterial treatment, researchers have unveiled an encouraging drug combination approach, linking PMB with tuspetinib (TUS) — a molecule hitherto renowned for its role in oncology. TUS, a selective FMS-like tyrosine kinase 3 (FLT3) inhibitor, is primarily deployed in combating acute myeloid leukemia (AML), celebrated for its targeted action and favorable safety spectrum. Yet, this novel investigation uncovers its surprising potential to bolster PMB’s efficacy against problematic bacterial strains, specifically Klebsiella pneumoniae, a notorious pathogen implicated in severe hospital-acquired infections.

Delving into the molecular interplay between bacterial resistance and drug action, the study elucidates the pivotal role of an enzyme called GlcNAc6P deacetylase (NagA) in PMB resistance. NagA, an essential enzyme in bacterial cell wall biosynthesis, emerges as a key facilitator of resistance mechanisms, allowing bacteria to withstand PMB’s otherwise lethal assault. Intriguingly, TUS appears to inhibit NagA’s enzymatic activity, thereby dismantling a crucial bacterial defense line. This mechanistic insight is a landmark discovery that expands our understanding of how chemical inhibition within bacterial metabolic pathways can be therapeutically exploited to circumvent resistance.

Klebsiella pneumoniae, especially clinical isolates resistant to polymyxin B, poses a profoundly difficult therapeutic challenge due to its ability to modify its outer membrane and avert antimicrobial penetration. The newly discovered synergy between TUS and PMB offers hope as it enhances bacterial susceptibility to PMB significantly, even in strains classified as resistant. This transformative finding not only rescues PMB’s efficacy but also suggests extending its clinical applications amidst an era shadowed by the looming threat of antibiotic failure.

To validate these compelling in vitro findings, researchers employed a mouse model of pulmonary infection, using a clinical PMB-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae strain. The results were striking: combination therapy with TUS and PMB markedly improved infection clearance and survival rates compared to monotherapy with PMB alone. These experimental outcomes reinforce the therapeutic promise of this combination, potentially heralding a new standard in treating MDR bacterial lung infections, which remain daunting for critically ill patients.

Moreover, the study’s revelations resonate beyond the immediate application to Klebsiella pneumoniae. By targeting NagA, TUS might pave the way for repurposing kinase inhibitors and other small molecules to combat bacterial pathogens. This innovative paradigm represents a convergence of oncology and infectious disease pharmacology, proposing a fertile avenue for future drug discovery and repositioning initiatives.

Importantly, the safety profile of TUS as established in oncology settings lends substantial credence to its prospective deployment alongside PMB. Since PMB-associated nephrotoxicity often limits therapeutic strategies, the addition of TUS might allow for reduced PMB dosages without sacrificing antibacterial potency, thereby enhancing patient outcomes and minimizing adverse effects. This balance between efficacy and safety is critical in managing severe infections where treatment options are narrowly defined.

On a molecular scale, the inhibition of NagA by TUS underscores the intricate interplay between bacterial metabolism and antibiotic susceptibility. GlcNAc6P deacetylase catalyzes a key step in the peptidoglycan recycling pathway, impacting cell wall integrity and the bacterial response to external stressors, including antibiotics. Interrupting this pathway not only sensitizes bacteria to polymyxin B but could also disrupt broader bacterial survival strategies, setting a precedent for targeted metabolic intervention in antimicrobial therapy.

Given the growing prevalence of PMB resistance reported globally, this newly elucidated drug interaction heralds a timely advancement. It brings a new dimension to existing therapeutic regimens by leveraging a known kinase inhibitor’s unanticipated antimicrobial adjunct capabilities. The extension of TUS’s application into the antimicrobial sphere could inspire similar research into other kinase inhibitors, thereby widening the pharmacologic armamentarium against MDR infections.

In clinical contexts, the translation of these findings could revolutionize treatment protocols for infections caused by Gram-negative bacteria, notorious for their recalcitrance and adaptive commentary. The insights afforded by this research emphasize the importance of precision medicine approaches in infectious disease, integrating molecular targeting with traditional antimicrobial therapies to overcome resistance hurdles.

Furthermore, the prospect of combining drugs like TUS and PMB to exert a synergistic antibacterial effect is especially compelling in settings where therapeutic options are rapidly narrowing. Hospital environments battling outbreaks of resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae may benefit tremendously from such combination therapies by reducing mortality and curtailing infection spread.

Scaling the application of this research will require meticulous clinical trials to determine optimal dosing, safety parameters, and efficacy across diverse patient populations. However, the foundational work accomplished thus far lays a firm groundwork, exemplifying how strategic pharmacologic combinations can tackle the pressing threat posed by MDR pathogens, an area historically plagued by slow drug development.

This research also sheds light on the untapped potential residing in immune-modulating or oncological agents. Repurposing such drugs in infectious disease challenges traditional drug development paradigms and encourages cross-disciplinary innovation, essential for staying ahead in the race against antibiotic resistance.

In summary, the discovery that tuspetinib enhances the activity of polymyxin B by inhibiting the GlcNAc6P deacetylase NagA represents a pioneering stride forward in antibiotic potentiation strategies. It marries mechanistic insight with translational relevance, heralding a new frontier where targeted small molecules can rejuvenate the effectiveness of last-resort antibiotics against recalcitrant bacterial pathogens. As antibiotic resistance continues to threaten global health, such innovative approaches may prove invaluable in preserving and extending our antimicrobial arsenal.

Subject of Research: The study investigates the enhancement of polymyxin B’s antibacterial activity against multidrug-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae through the inhibition of the GlcNAc6P deacetylase NagA by tuspetinib.

Article Title: Tuspetinib enhances the activity of polymyxin B by inhibiting the GlcNAc6P deacetylase.

Article References:
Ouyang, Y., Zhang, J., Cui, R. et al. Tuspetinib enhances the activity of polymyxin B by inhibiting the GlcNAc6P deacetylase. J Antibiot (2026). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41429-026-00920-4

Image Credits: AI Generated

DOI: 10 April 2026

Tags: acute myeloid leukemia drugs repurposingantibiotic resistance treatmentcombination drug therapies for MDR bacteriaFLT3 inhibitors in infection controlKlebsiella pneumoniae antibiotic resistancelast-resort antibioticsmultidrug-resistant bacteria solutionsnephrotoxicity reduction strategiesnovel antibacterial drug developmentovercoming Gram-negative bacterial resistancepolymyxin B enhancementtuspetinib antibiotic synergy

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