Correlative Light Electron Ion Microscopy reveal <i>in vivo</i> localisation of bedaquiline in <i>Mycobacterium tuberculosis</i> infected lungs
Antony Fearns, Daniel J. Greenwood, Angela Rodgers, Haibo Jiang, Maximiliano G. Gutiérrez
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) · 2020-08
Abstract
Abstract Correlative light, electron and ion microscopy (CLEIM) offers huge potential to track the intracellular fate of antibiotics, with organelle-level resolution. However, a correlative approach that enables subcellular antibiotic visualisation in pathogen-infected tissue is lacking. Here, we developed CLEIM in tissue (CLEIMiT), and used it to identify the cell-type specific accumulation of an antibiotic in lung lesions of mice infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Using CLEIMiT, we found that the anti-TB drug bedaquiline is localised not only in foamy macrophages in the lungs during infection but also accumulate in polymorphonuclear (PMN) cells.
MeSH terms
- Bedaquiline
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Correlative
- Antibiotics
- Organelle
- Tuberculosis
- Electron microscope
- Microbiology
- Biology
- Intracellular
- Ultrastructure
- Pathology