| Literature DB >> 28099463 |
Matthew Chamberlain1, Sophia Koutsogiannaki1, Matthew Schaefers1, Hasan Babazada2, Renyu Liu2, Koichi Yuki1.
Abstract
Volatile anesthetics have been in clinical use for a long period of time and are considered to be promiscuous by presumably interacting with several ion channels in the central nervous system to produce anesthesia. Because ion channels and their existing evolutionary analogues, ion transporters, are very important in various organisms, it is possible that volatile anesthetics may affect some bacteria. In this study, we hypothesized that volatile anesthetics could affect bacterial behaviors. We evaluated the impact of anesthetics on bacterial growth, motility (swimming and gliding) and biofilm formation of four common bacterial pathogens in vitro. We found that commonly used volatile anesthetics isoflurane and sevoflurane affected bacterial motility and biofilm formation without any effect on growth of the common bacterial pathogens studied here. Using available Escherichia coli gene deletion mutants of ion transporters and in silico molecular docking, we suggested that these altered behaviors might be at least partly via the interaction of volatile anesthetics with ion transporters.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28099463 PMCID: PMC5242519 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0170089
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
The previous studies of effects of anesthetics on bacterial growth.
| Drug tested | Bacteria | Duration of exposure | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3% Sevoflurane, 60% Nitrous oxide | Pseudomonas aeruginosa Acinetobacter lwoffii, Staphylococcus aureus | 3 hrs | No change in S.aureus, very small increase in A.lwoffii and P.aeruginosa under 3% sevoflurane, more than 2 fold increase in A.lwoffii and P. aeruginosa under 60% nitrous oxide | [ |
| Isoflurane (2%) | Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aurerus | 2 hrs | No chance | [ |
| Isoflurane (21–25%) | Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus pneumoniae, coliform bacteria | 16 hrs | No effect | [ |
| halothane (2–5%) | Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli | 4 hrs | No effect | [ |
| Isoflurane (1.1–2.3%), halothane (0.8–1.5%) | Psedumonas aeruginosa | 4 hrs | Reduction in growth under both isoflurane and halothane | [ |
| Halothane (1–10%) | Escherichia coli, Bacillus licheniformis, Staphylococcus albus, Micrococcus lysodeikticus | 24 hrs | Effect seen only at > 5% of halothane | [ |
Bacterial strains used in the study.
| Bacteria strains or plasmids | Description of genotype | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| [ | ||
| [ | ||
| [ | ||
| [ | ||
| [ | ||
| [ | ||
| [ | ||
| kefC deletion mutant, KanR | [ | |
| [ | ||
| mscK deletion mutant, KanR | [ | |
| [ | ||
| This study | ||
| This study | ||
| This study | ||
| CC8 clinical isolates | TF | |
| Clinical isolates | GP | |
| Multi host pathogen | GP | |
| Fln recombinase gene (+) | [ | |
| Cat resistance gene flanked by FRT | [ | |
| Kan resistance gene flanked by FRT | [ | |
| Lambda red recombinase expression plasmid | [ |
*GP = obtained from Dr. Gregory Priebe (Boston Children’s Hospital), TF = obtained from Dr. Timthy Foster (Ireland)
Known ion transporters in E.coli K12.
| Classification | |
|---|---|
| Chloride ion transporter | |
| Sodium ion transporter | |
| Potassium ion transporter | |