Advanced Therapies Group, Cardiff University School of Dentistry, Cardiff, United Kingdom
Advanced Therapies Group, Cardiff University School of Dentistry, Cardiff, United Kingdom.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2017 Aug 24;61(9). doi: 10.1128/AAC.00762-17. Print 2017 Sep.
In chronic respiratory disease, the formation of dense, 3-dimensional "microcolonies" by within the airway plays an important role in contributing to resistance to treatment. An biofilm model of pseudomonal microcolony formation using artificial-sputum (AS) medium was established to study the effects of low-molecular-weight alginate oligomers (OligoG CF-5/20) on pseudomonal growth, microcolony formation, and the efficacy of colistin. The studies employed clinical cystic fibrosis (CF) isolates ( = 3) and reference nonmucoid and mucoid multidrug-resistant (MDR) CF isolates ( = 7). Bacterial growth and biofilm development and disruption were studied using cell viability assays and image analysis with scanning electron and confocal laser scanning microscopy. Pseudomonal growth in AS medium was associated with increased ATP production ( < 0.05) and the formation (at 48 h) of discrete (>10-μm) microcolonies. In conventional growth medium, colistin retained an ability to inhibit growth of planktonic bacteria, although the MIC was increased (0.1 to 0.4 μg/ml) in AS medium compared to Mueller-Hinton (MH) medium. In contrast, in an established-biofilm model in AS medium, the efficacy of colistin was decreased. OligoG CF-5/20 (≥2%) treatment, however, induced dose-dependent biofilm disruption ( < 0.05) and led to colistin retaining its antimicrobial activity ( < 0.05). While circular dichroism indicated that OligoG CF-5/20 did not change the orientation of the alginate carboxyl groups, mass spectrometry demonstrated that the oligomers induced dose-dependent (>0.2%; < 0.05) reductions in pseudomonal quorum-sensing signaling. These findings reinforce the potential clinical significance of microcolony formation in the CF lung and highlight a novel approach to treat MDR pseudomonal infections.
在慢性呼吸道疾病中, 在气道内形成密集的三维“微菌落”,在对抗治疗方面发挥着重要作用。本研究建立了一种使用人工痰(AS)培养基的假单胞菌微菌落形成的 生物膜模型,以研究低分子量藻酸盐寡聚物(OligoG CF-5/20)对假单胞菌生长、微菌落形成和多粘菌素疗效的影响。该研究使用了临床囊性纤维化(CF)分离株(n=3)和参考非粘液性和粘液性多药耐药(MDR)CF 分离株(n=7)。使用细胞活力测定和扫描电子显微镜和共聚焦激光扫描显微镜的图像分析研究细菌生长和生物膜形成和破坏。AS 培养基中假单胞菌的生长与 ATP 产量的增加( < 0.05)和离散(>10-μm)微菌落的形成(48 小时)有关。在常规生长培养基中,多粘菌素保留抑制浮游细菌生长的能力,尽管与 Mueller-Hinton(MH)培养基相比,AS 培养基中的 MIC 增加(0.1 至 0.4μg/ml)。相比之下,在 AS 培养基中建立的生物膜模型中,多粘菌素的疗效降低。然而,OligoG CF-5/20(≥2%)治疗诱导了剂量依赖性生物膜破坏( < 0.05),并使多粘菌素保持其抗菌活性( < 0.05)。虽然圆二色性表明 OligoG CF-5/20 没有改变藻酸盐羧基的方向,但质谱表明寡聚物诱导了剂量依赖性(>0.2%; < 0.05)假单胞菌群体感应信号的降低。这些发现强化了 CF 肺中微菌落形成的潜在临床意义,并突出了一种治疗 MDR 假单胞菌感染的新方法。