| Literature DB >> 29273750 |
Jonathan B Mandell1, Berthony Deslouches2, Ronald C Montelaro2, Robert M Q Shanks3, Yohei Doi4, Kenneth L Urish5,6,7,8,9.
Abstract
Antibiotics are unable to remove biofilms from surgical implants. This high antibiotic tolerance is related to bacterial persisters, a sub-population of bacteria phenotypically tolerant to antibiotics secondary to a reduced metabolic state. WLBU2 is an engineered cationic amphipathic peptide designed to maximize antimicrobial activity with minimal mammalian cell toxicity. The objective of this study was to test the ability of WLBU2 to remove Staphylococcus aureus surgical implant biofilms. WLBU2 effectively treated S. aureus biofilms formed by a variety of clinical MSSA and MRSA strains and created culture-negative implants in the in vitro biofilm model. Blocking bacterial metabolism by inhibiting oxidative phosphorylation did not affect WLBU2 killing compared to decreased killing by cefazolin. In the surgical implant infection animal model, WLBU2 decreased biofilm mass as compared to control, untreated samples. WLBU2 could rapidly eliminate implants in vitro and had sufficient efficacy in vivo with minimal systemic toxicity.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29273750 PMCID: PMC5741726 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-17780-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(A–E) Antimicrobial activity of cefazolin and WLBU2 against planktonic methicillin-sensitive S. aureus (SH1000). (A) Minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of cefazolin and WLBU2 determined by serial dilutions of antibiotics added to SH1000 plated at 0.5 × 106 CFU and overnight culture turbidity. (B) Minimum bactericidal concentration (MBC) of cefazolin determined by CFU drop assays at select time points after addition of antibiotic, red dashed line represents 99.9% drop in live bacteria. (C) Initial attempt at WLBU2 MBC quantification based on cefazolin temporal progression, antimicrobial peptide yielded sterile conditions. (D) CFU analysis on WLBU2 treated samples within 30 minutes after treatment, showing dose response of killing. (E) 10xMIC of WLBU2 added to log fold dilutions of SH1000 including overnight stock inoculum (109 CFU/ml) and CFU analysis performed after 30 minutes, WLBU2 at this kills over 99.9% of SH1000 up to 108 CFU/ml.
Figure 2(A–B) Antimicrobial activity of cefazolin and WLBU2 against S. aureus biofilm. (A) Mature biofilms grown on Kirschner wire treated with cefazolin or WLBU2 at 10xMIC, CFU analysis shows cefazolin failed to clear 99.9% after 24 hours while WLBU2 sterilized Kirschner wire after 30 minutes, red dashed line represents 99.9% drop in live bacteria compared to pretreatment biofilm CFU (B) After CFU assay Kirschner wires placed into fresh MHB and turbidity of culture checked every 24 hours for 3 days, sterile cultures seen in 24 hour WLBU2 treated samples.
72-hour culture test from panel of methicillin sensitive and resistant S. aureus clinical isolate biofilms after 24 hours of treatment with cefazolin or WLBU2 at 10x MIC. Each strain repeated at least three separate times in triplicate.
| Clinical Isolate | Cefazolin Treated | Vancomycin Treated | WLBU2 Treated |
|---|---|---|---|
| MSSA-1 | 100% (12/12) | 100% (10/10) | 0% (0/10) |
| MSSA-2 | 100% (9/9) | 100% (9/9) | 0% (0/9) |
| MSSA-3 | 100% (9/9) | 100% (9/9) | 0% (0/9) |
| MSSA-4 | 100% (9/9) | 25% (3/12) | 0% (0/9) |
| MRSA-1 | 100% (9/9) | 100% (9/9) | 0% (0/9) |
| MRSA-2 | 100% (9/9) | 100% (9/9) | 0% (0/9) |
| MRSA-3 | 100% (9/9) | 50% (5/10) | 0% (0/9) |
| MRSA-4 | 100% (9/9) | 100% (9/9) | 0% (0/9) |
| MRSA-5 | 100% (9/9) | 100% (9/9) | 0% (0/9) |
Figure 3(A–H) Further evaluation of differences in cefazolin and WLBU2 bactericidal action against SH1000. (A) Planktonic SH1000 treated with cefazolin or WLBU2 at 10xMIC after pretreatment with 12.5 μg/ml CCCP, significant increase in percent survival in cefazolin group but not in WLBU2 group. (B) CFU assay performed at earlier 30-minute time point after WLBU2 treatment to pretreated and control showed no difference in bactericidal efficacy. Mature biofilms grown on chamber slides were stained with LIVE/DEAD bacterial viability kit and fluorescent microscopy performed after no treatment (C) 30-minute cefazolin treatment (D), or 30-minute Cefazolin Treated (E).
Figure 4(A–B) Periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) murine model testing bactericidal efficacy of WLBU2 in vivo. Mice received Kirschner wire implant up femoral canal and 1 × 106 CFUs of SH1000 injected into knee joint. Groups received log increases in WLBU2 intraperitoneally twice a day for 3 days and compared to untreated as well as traditional antibiotic treated groups (cefazolin and rifampin). (A) Kirscher wire implant placed into 1% Tween 20 and sonicated 10 minutes, drop assays on blood agar plates shows significant reduction of implant biofilm in WLBU2 groups (0.1–10 mg/kg), red dashed line represents 99.9% drop in live bacteria compared to untreated. (B) Proximal femur piece cut placed into 1% Tween 20 and homogenized for 60 seconds, shows significant reduction in local bacterial tissue burden in WLBU2 groups, red dashed line represents 99.9% drop in live bacteria compared to untreated.