In vitro assays elucidate peculiar kinetics of clindamycin action against Toxoplasma gondii.

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In order to characterize the delayed effect of clindamycin and macrolide antibiotics against Toxoplasma gondii tachyzoites (E. R. Pfefferkorn and S. E. Borotz, Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 38:31-37, 1994), we have carefully examined the replication of parasites as a function of time after drug addition. Intracellular tachyzoites treated with up to 20 microM clindamycin (> 1,000 times the 50% inhibitory concentration) exhibit doubling times indistinguishable from those of controls (approximately 7 h). Drug-treated parasites emerge from infected cells and establish parasitophorous vacuoles inside new host cells as efficiently as untreated controls, but replication within the second vacuole is dramatically slowed. Growth inhibition in the second vacuole does not require continued presence of drug, but it is dependent solely on the concentration and duration of drug treatment in the first (previous) vacuole. The susceptibility of intracellular parasites to nanomolar concentrations of clindamycin contrasts with that of extracellular tachyzoites, which are completely resistant to treatment, even through several cycles of subsequent intracellular replication. This peculiar phenotype, in which drug effects are observed only in the second infectious cycle, also characterizes azithromycin and chloramphenicol treatment, but not treatment with cycloheximide, tetracycline, or anisomycin. These findings provide new insights into the mode of clindamycin and macrolide action against T. gondii, although the relevant target for their action remains unknown.

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