| Literature DB >> 30135366 |
Frédéric Barras1,2, Laurent Aussel3, Benjamin Ezraty4.
Abstract
The therapeutic arsenal against bacterial infections is rapidly shrinking, as drug resistance spreads and pharmaceutical industry are struggling to produce new antibiotics. In this review we cover the efficacy of silver as an antibacterial agent. In particular we recall experimental evidences pointing to the multiple targets of silver, including DNA, proteins and small molecules, and we review the arguments for and against the hypothesis that silver acts by enhancing oxidative stress. We also review the recent use of silver as an adjuvant for antibiotics. Specifically, we discuss the state of our current understanding on the potentiating action of silver ions on aminoglycoside antibiotics.Entities:
Keywords: ROS; adjuvant; antibiotics; combinatorial; metal; silver
Year: 2018 PMID: 30135366 PMCID: PMC6163818 DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics7030079
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antibiotics (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6382
Figure 1Pleiotropic molecular basis of antimicrobial effects of silver. Silver targets different macromolecules in bacteria. Here are depicted modifications observed in silver-treated bacteria such as DNA condensation, membrane alteration and protein damages. In this latter case, several situations were reported wherein silver ions interacted with thiol group, destabilised Fe-S clusters or substituted to metals in metalloproteins.
Figure 2Searching for the causal link between silver ions and ROS production. Silver is a non-redox active metal that cannot directly produce ROS. Some experimental evidences however pointed to the enhanced production of ROS in the presence of silver ions. Depicted here are possible indirect ways silver ions could participate to ROS production: Perturbation of respiratory electron transfer chain, Fenton chemistry following destabilization of Fe-S clusters, or displacement of iron, inhibition of anti-ROS defences by thiol-silver bond formation.
Antibacterial activity of silver ions in combination with antibiotics.
| Antibiotics | Organism | Culture Condition | Effects | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Ampicillin |
| Laboratory medium | 10-fold increase in antimicrobial activity | [ |
|
| Ofloxacine, Nalidixic Acid, Norfloxacin |
| Laboratory medium | 10-fold increase in antimicrobial activity. MIC value decreased 10–25% | [ |
|
| Gentamicin |
| Laboratory medium. Animal models | 100-fold increase in antimicrobial activity. MIC value decreased more than 10-fold | [ |
|
| Laboratory medium | MIC value decreased 4-fold | [ | ||
| Tobramycin | Laboratory medium | MIC value decreased 10-fold ( | [ | ||
| Kanamycin Streptomycin |
| Laboratory medium | MIC value decreased more than 10-fold | [ | |
|
|
| Laboratory medium | MIC value decreased 2-fold | [ | |
|
|
| Laboratory medium. Animal models | 10-fold increase in antimicrobial activity | [ | |
|
|
| Laboratory medium | MIC value decreased 1.5-fold | [ | |
|
| Laboratory medium. Animal models | 10-fold increase in MIC value | [ | ||
|
|
| Laboratory medium | MIC value decreased 5- to 10-fold | [ | |
|
|
| Laboratory medium | MIC value decreased 5-10 fold | [ | |
|
| Laboratory medium | MIC value decreased 2-fold | [ | ||
Figure 3Silver potentiates antibiotics toxicity. The capacity of silver ions to enhance the toxicity of antibiotics from different family is represented. The size of the arrows line reflects the extent of the synergistic effect.
Figure 4A molecular mechanism model for aminoglycoside and silver synergy. Silver enhances aminoglycoside toxicity by enhancing their uptake. Silver could destabilise the membrane either directly by altering intrinsic membrane proteins or indirectly by acting on ribosomes, which would produce misfolded aborted polypeptides that would eventually go to the inner membrane. Increased permeability of membrane would provoke massive aminoglycoside uptake.