Brar Navdeep Kaur, Dhariwal Achal, Shekhar Sudhanshu, Junges Roger, Hakansson Anders P, Petersen Fernanda Cristina
Institute of Oral Biology, Faculty of Dentistry, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Institute of Experimental Infection Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Lund University, Malmö, Sweden.
Front Microbiol. 2024 Jul 4;15:1406190. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2024.1406190. eCollection 2024.
Challenges from infections caused by biofilms and antimicrobial resistance highlight the need for novel antimicrobials that work in conjunction with antibiotics and minimize resistance risk. In this study we investigated the composite effect of HAMLET (human alpha-lactalbumin made lethal to tumor cells), a human milk protein-lipid complex and amoxicillin on microbial ecology using an oral biofilm model with pooled saliva samples. HAMLET was chosen due to its multi-targeted antimicrobial mechanism, together with its synergistic effect with antibiotics on single species pathogens, and low risk of resistance development. The combination of HAMLET and low concentrations of amoxicillin significantly reduced biofilm viability, while each of them alone had little or no impact. Using a whole metagenomics approach, we found that the combination promoted a remarkable shift in overall microbial composition compared to the untreated samples. A large proportion of the bacterial species in the combined treatment were , a species with probiotic effects, whereas it was only detected in a minor fraction in untreated samples. Although resistome analysis indicated no major shifts in alpha-diversity, the results showed the presence of beta-lactamase genes in low proportions in all treated samples but absence in untreated samples. Our study illustrates HAMLET's capability to alter the effects of amoxicillin on the oral microbiome and potentially favor the growth of selected probiotic bacteria when in combination. The findings extend previous knowledge on the combined effects of HAMLET and antibiotics against target pathogens to include potential modulatory effects on polymicrobial biofilms of human origin.
生物膜引起的感染和抗菌药物耐药性带来的挑战凸显了新型抗菌药物的必要性,这类药物需与抗生素协同作用,并将耐药风险降至最低。在本研究中,我们使用含有混合唾液样本的口腔生物膜模型,研究了人α-乳白蛋白制成的对肿瘤细胞有致死性的复合物(HAMLET,一种人乳蛋白-脂质复合物)与阿莫西林对微生物生态的复合效应。选择HAMLET是因其具有多靶点抗菌机制,以及它与抗生素对单一物种病原体的协同效应,且耐药性发展风险低。HAMLET与低浓度阿莫西林的组合显著降低了生物膜的活力,而它们单独使用时几乎没有影响。使用全宏基因组学方法,我们发现与未处理的样本相比,该组合促进了整体微生物组成的显著变化。联合处理中的大部分细菌种类是具有益生菌作用的一种细菌,而在未处理的样本中仅在一小部分中检测到。尽管耐药基因组分析表明α多样性没有重大变化,但结果显示所有处理样本中都存在低比例的β-内酰胺酶基因,而未处理样本中不存在。我们的研究表明,HAMLET有能力改变阿莫西林对口腔微生物群的影响,并在联合使用时可能有利于选定益生菌的生长。这些发现扩展了先前关于HAMLET和抗生素对目标病原体联合作用的知识,将其范围扩大到对人类来源的多微生物生物膜的潜在调节作用。