| Literature DB >> 25140449 |
Ioannis Liakos1, Alexandru Mihai Grumezescu2, Alina Maria Holban3.
Abstract
This review highlights the current situation of antimicrobial resistance and the use of magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) in developing novel routes for fighting infectious diseases. The most important two directions developed recently are: (i) improved delivery of antimicrobial compounds based on a drastic decrease of the minimal inhibition concentration (MIC) of the drug used independently; and (ii) inhibition of microbial attachment and biofilm development on coated medical surfaces. These new directions represent promising alternatives in the development of new strategies to eradicate and prevent microbial infections that involve resistant and biofilm-embedded bacteria. Recent promising applications of MNPs, as the development of delivery nanocarriers and improved nanovehicles for the therapy of different diseases are discussed, together with the mechanisms of microbial inhibition.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25140449 PMCID: PMC6271397 DOI: 10.3390/molecules190812710
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1The main mechanisms of AMR: overproduction of efflux pumps, antibiotic modification and antibiotic degradation (reproduced from [2] with permission).
Estimated 2007 morbidity and mortality due to selected antibiotic-resistance bacteria in EU Member States, Iceland and Norway (reproduced from [3] with permission).
| Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria | Number of Cases of Infection * | Number of Extra Deaths | Number of Extra Hospital Days |
|---|---|---|---|
| Methicillin-resistant | 171,200 (12%) | 5400 (37%) | 1,050,000 (16%) |
| Vancomycin-resistant | 18,100 (9%) | 1500 (28%) | 111,000 (22%) |
| Penicillin-resistant | 3500 (27%) | Not calculable | Not calculable |
| Sub-total | 192,800 (12%) | 6900 (35%) | 1,161,000 (16%) |
| Third-generation cephalosporin-resistant | 32,500 (27%) | 5100 (52%) | 358,000 (27%) |
| Third-generation cephalosporin-resistant | 18,900 (27%) | 2900 (52%) | 208,000 (27%) |
| Carbapenem-resistant | 141,900 (3%) | 10,200 (7%) | 809,000 (3%) |
| Sub-total | 193,300 (9%) | 18,200 (27%) | 1,375,000 (13%) |
* Bloodstream, lower respiratory tract, skin & soft tissue and urinary tract infections. Values in parentheses correspond to bloodstream infections only.
Discovery of antimicrobial drugs during 1930s–2000s.
| 1930s | 1940s | 1950s | 1960s | 1970s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000s |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sulfonamides | Beta-lactams | Glycopeptides | Lincosamides | Trimethoprim | Oxazolidinones | ||
| Aminoglycosides | Chloramphenicol | Quinolones | Lipopeptides | ||||
| Tetracyclines | Streptogramins | ||||||
| Macrolides |
* Penicillin was the first beta-lactam discovered. Other beta-lactams were the cephalosporins and carbapenems discovered in 1960s and 1980s respectively. Generated data from [1,3,6] with permission.
Figure 2Schematic representation of microbial biofilm development in the presence and absence of functionalized bioactive magnetite nanoparticles.
List of MNPs in combination with active compounds to inhibit yeasts.
| Type of Nanoparticles | Altered Microbial Phenotype | Bacteria Species | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| MNPs/ | Adherence, biofilm formation | [ | |
| MNPs/Ag/chitosan | Adherence, biofilm formation | [ | |
| MNPs/chitosan/nystatin | Growth on solid media | [ | |
| MNPs/ | Adherence, biofilm formation | [ | |
| MNPs/chitosan/nystatin | Growth rate | [ | |
| MNPs/ | Adherence, biofilm formation | [ | |
| MNPs/dextran | Growth | [ | |
| MNPs/ | Adherence, biofilm formation | [ | |
| MNPs/oleic acids | Adherence, biofilm formation | [ | |
| MNPs/Ag/chitosan | Growth | [ |
List of plain and functionalized MNPs derivatives with effect on several microbial phenotypes.
| Type of Nanoparticles | Altered Microbial Phenotype | Bacteria Species | Reference | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MNPs/chitosan/cephalosporins | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| MNPs/Ag/chitosan | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| Polyacrylamide doped MNPs | Viability | [ | |||||
| MNPs/Na-PGA | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| MNPs stabilized with thioglycerol | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| 66 nm of iron oxide MNPs | Viability, growth Inhibition on solid media | [ | |||||
| Dextran coated MNPs | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| MNPs/chitosa/aminoglycosides | Growth | [ | |||||
| MNPs/chitosan/Cephalosporins | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| Spherical MNPs coated with eugenol | Adherence, biofilm formation | [ | |||||
| MNPs/chitosan/ antibiotics (penicillins, macrolides, aminoglycosides, rifampicines quinolones) | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| MNPs/Ag/chitosan | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| MNPs stabilized with thioglycerol | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| 66 nm of iron oxide MNPs | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| MNPs/chitosan/ aminoglycosides (kanamycin and neomycin) | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| Spherical MNPs coated with eugenol | Adherence, biofilm formation | [ | |||||
| MNPs/chitosan/carboxymethylcellulose/antibiotics (penicillins, macrolides, aminoglycosides, rifampicines quinolones) | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| MNPs/Ag/chitosan | Viability | [ | |||||
| MNPs stabilized with thioglycerol | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| MNPs coated with vancomycin, penicillin and streptomycin | Adherence, biofilm formation | [ | |||||
| MNPs/Ag/chitosan | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| dextran coated MNPs | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| MNPs/Ag/chitosan | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| 66 nm of iron oxide MNPs | Growth inhibition on solid media | [ | |||||
| MNPs/Ca-PGA | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| MNPs/Na-PGA | |||||||
| MNPs/Ag/chitosan | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| MNPs coated with amino acids ( | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| MNPs stabilized with thioglycerol | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| 66 nm of iron oxide MNPs | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| 66 nm of iron oxide MNPs | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| 66 nm of iron oxide MNPs | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| 66 nm of iron oxide MNPs | Viability, growth | [ | |||||
| 66 nm of iron oxide MNPs | Viability, growth | [ |
Figure 3Schematic representation of the possible interaction between bacteria with (a) antibiotics and (b) magnetic nanoparticles - antibiotics nano-carriers.