Gad Faten, Zahra Touqir, Francis Kevin P, Hasan Tayyaba, Hamblin Michael R
Wellman Laboratories of Photomedicine, Masschusetts General Hospital, Boston 02114, USA.
Photochem Photobiol Sci. 2004 May;3(5):451-8. doi: 10.1039/b311901g. Epub 2004 Feb 11.
The worldwide rise in antibiotic resistance necessitates the development of novel antimicrobial strategies. Although many workers have used photodynamic therapy (PDT) to kill bacteria in vitro, the use of this approach has seldom been reported in vivo in animal models of infection. We have previously described the first use of PDT to treat excisional wound infections by Gram-(-) bacteria in living mice. However, these infected wound models involved a short timespan between infection (30 min) and treatment by PDT. We now report on the use of PDT to treat an established soft-tissue infection in mice. We used Staphylococcus aureus stably transformed with a Photorhabdus luminescenslux operon (luxABCDE) that was genetically modified to be functional in Gram-(+) bacteria. These engineered bacteria emitted bioluminescence, allowing the progress of the infection to be monitored in both space and time with a low light imaging charge-coupled device (CCD) camera. One million cells were injected into one or both thigh muscles of mice that had previously been rendered neutropenic by cyclophosphamide administration. Twenty-four hours later, the bacteria had multiplied more than one hundredfold; poly-L-lysine chlorin e6 conjugate or free chlorin e6 was injected into one area of infected muscle and imaged with the CCD camera. Thirty minutes later, red light from a diode laser was delivered as a surface spot or by interstitial fiber into the infection. There was a light dose dependent loss of bioluminescence (to <5% of that seen in control infections) not seen in untreated infections or those treated with light alone, but in some cases, the infection recurred. Treatment with conjugate alone led to a lesser reduction in bioluminescence. Infections treated with free chlorin e6 responded less well and the infection subsequently increased over the succeeding days, probably due to PDT-mediated tissue damage. PDT-treated infected legs healed better than legs with untreated infections. This data shows that PDT may have applications in drug-resistant soft-tissue infections.
全球抗生素耐药性的上升使得开发新的抗菌策略成为必要。尽管许多研究人员已使用光动力疗法(PDT)在体外杀死细菌,但在感染动物模型中的体内应用鲜有报道。我们之前曾描述过首次使用PDT治疗活体小鼠中革兰氏阴性菌引起的切除伤口感染。然而,这些感染伤口模型在感染(30分钟)和PDT治疗之间的时间跨度较短。我们现在报告使用PDT治疗小鼠已建立的软组织感染。我们使用了稳定转染了发光杆菌lux操纵子(luxABCDE)的金黄色葡萄球菌,该操纵子经过基因改造后可在革兰氏阳性菌中发挥作用。这些工程菌发出生物荧光,从而能够使用低光成像电荷耦合器件(CCD)相机在空间和时间上监测感染的进展。将一百万个细胞注射到先前通过环磷酰胺给药使其中性粒细胞减少的小鼠的一条或两条大腿肌肉中。24小时后,细菌繁殖了一百多倍;将聚-L-赖氨酸二氢卟吩e6共轭物或游离二氢卟吩e6注射到感染肌肉的一个区域并用CCD相机成像。30分钟后,将二极管激光器发出的红光作为表面光斑或通过间质光纤照射到感染部位。存在光剂量依赖性的生物荧光损失(降至对照感染中所见荧光的<5%),在未治疗的感染或仅接受光照治疗的感染中未观察到这种情况,但在某些情况下,感染会复发。单独使用共轭物治疗导致生物荧光减少程度较小。用游离二氢卟吩e6治疗的感染反应较差,并且在随后的几天中感染随后增加,这可能是由于PDT介导的组织损伤。接受PDT治疗的感染腿部比未治疗感染的腿部愈合得更好。这些数据表明PDT可能在耐药性软组织感染中具有应用价值。