Small-molecule screen in C. elegans identifies benzenesulfonamides as inhibitors of microsporidia spores
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Microsporidia, a large group of fungal-related intracellular parasites, infect several economically significant animals, leading to substantial economic losses. As currently available anti-microsporidia therapies are either ineffective or come with numerous adverse effects, there is a need for alternative microsporidia inhibitors. Here we screen a subset of the ChemBridge DIVERset library, comprising 2500 diverse compounds, using Caenorhabditis elegans infected with its natural microsporidian parasite, Nematocida parisii . By testing these compounds at 60 μM in 96-well assay plates, we identified 26 hits that restored the ability of C. elegans to produce progeny in the presence of N. parisii . We confirmed that out of 20 tested compounds, 18 ChemBridge compounds effectively inhibit N. parisii infection in C. elegans . Of these 18, 10 were benzenesulfonamide derivatives which inhibit microsporidia infection by inactivating spores. We screened an additional 475-compound benzenesulfonamide library, successfully identifying three compounds that are effective at a lower concentration than the initial hits. We further show that one benzenesulfonamide compound displays inhibitory activity against several species of microsporidia, inhibiting infection of species belonging to the Nematocida , Enterocytozoon , and Encephalitozoon genera. Together our results suggest that benzenesulfonamides are a potential scaffold for the development of microsporidia antiseptics.