Host-directed therapies (HDT) represent a pivotal strategy in combating both drug-susceptible and drug-resistant tuberculosis (TB). Current evaluations, however, show limited success in animal models and clinical settings, emphasizing the need for more effective HDT candidates. With few druggable targets validated within granulomas, it is essential to verify the effectiveness of HDT candidates identified through traditional macrophage cultures in the context of the tuberculous granuloma milieus. Bioengineering a scalable, high-throughput screening (HTS) platform that replicates the physiological microenvironments in the hallmark tubercular lesions could significantly improve the identification of relevant HDT candidates and new treatment strategies. Here, we developed a facile, HTS-compatible bioplatform that generates tuberculoma-emulating structures, following three-dimensional (3D) co-cultures of human cells and pathogenic mycobacteria. Employing high-content imaging alongside immunological and transcriptomic approaches, we demonstrated that these 3D structures exhibit classic tuberculoma attributes and develop crucial transformations. Utilizing this system, we screened antibody biosimilars and potential HDT compounds. Our findings demonstrate the versatility of system in discovering antimicrobials and HDT candidates that effectively reduce mycobacterial burdens and granuloma lesions, while elucidating their immune mechanisms within 3D milieus. Many compounds effective in two-dimensional (2D) cultures were ineffective once granulomas formed in our 3D model. Notably, several promising compounds were found to induce rapid autophagy flux, and we validated the effectiveness of one such compound, the multi-kinase inhibitor AT9283, in a mouse model. Our findings highlight several HDT candidates for potential repurposing in TB treatment, offering a robust tool for accelerating therapeutic discoveries and advancing translational research for TB and other granulomatous diseases.
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Sable et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68bb4d206d6d5674bcd00edd — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1101/2025.08.27.672670
Suraj B. Sable
National Center for HIV/AIDS Viral Hepatitis STD and TB Prevention
Wen Li
Qinghai University
Al Kline
Pennsylvania State University
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