| Literature DB >> 31438510 |
Wiwit Tantibhedhyangkul1, Ekkarat Wongsawat2, Sutthicha Matamnan3, Naharuthai Inthasin3, Jintapa Sueasuay3, Yupin Suputtamongkol2.
Abstract
Mycoplasma contamination detrimentally affects cellular functions and the growth of intracellular pathogens in cell cultures. Although several mycoplasmacidal agents are commercially available for sterile cell cultures, they are not applicable to rickettsia-infected cells. In our attempt to find an anti-mycoplasma drug for contaminated rickettsial cultures, we determined the susceptibilities of three common Mycoplasma species to daptomycin. Mycoplasma orale and M. arginini showed low-level resistance to daptomycin (minimum inhibitory concentration, MIC = 2 mg/L), whereas M. hyorhinis was high-level resistant (MIC = 32 mg/L). However, some Mycoplasma isolates developed higher resistance to daptomycin after failed treatments with inadequate doses or durations. An aminoglycoside (gentamicin) was still active against M. hyorhinis and could be used in Orientia cultures. For complete eradication of mycoplasmas in Rickettsia cultures, we recommend a 3-week treatment with daptomycin at 256 mg/L. In contaminated Orientia cultures, daptomycin at 32 mg/L was effective in eradicating M. orale, whereas either gentamicin or amikacin (100 mg/L) was effective in eradicating M. hyorhinis. Unlike each drug alone, the combinations of daptomycin plus clindamycin and/or quinupristin/dalfopristin proved effective in eradicating M. hyorhinis. In summary, our study demonstrated the in vitro anti-mycoplasma activity of daptomycin and its application as a new mycoplasma decontamination method for Rickettsia and Orientia cultures.Entities:
Keywords: Orientia tsutsugamushi; Rickettsia; cell culture; daptomycin; mycoplasma
Year: 2019 PMID: 31438510 PMCID: PMC6784056 DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics8030123
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antibiotics (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6382
MICs (mg/L) of Different Antibiotics for Mycoplasma spp., Rickettsia spp., and Orientia tsutsugamushi.
| Drugs | MICs (mg/L) for organisms | ||
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Daptomycin | 2 ( | >256 ( | 128 (Karp) * |
| Quinupristin/Dalfopristin | 0.05–2 [ | 8 ( | 1 (Gilliam) * |
| Clindamycin | Susceptible | >32 * | >32 * |
| Fluoroquinolones | Susceptible | 0.25–1 (CIP) [ | 4 (CIP) [ |
| Aminoglycosides (gentamicin) | <4 (GEN, | 4–16 [ | >100 (GEN, AMK) * |
* Data from this study. The superscript numbers indicate the references. Abbreviations: MXF, moxifloxacin; CIP, ciprofloxacin; GEN, gentamicin; AMK, amikacin.
Successful Mycoplasma Decontamination Protocols in this Study.
| Cultures | Contaminants | Treatment 1 |
|---|---|---|
|
|
| Daptomycin 32 mg/L |
|
|
| Daptomycin 32 mg/L |
|
|
| Daptomycin 32 mg/L |
|
| Mixed | Daptomycin 32 mg/L for |
|
| Daptomycin 32 mg/L 2 | |
|
| Gentamicin 50–100 mg/L or Amikacin 100 mg/L | |
| L929 cells without rickettisae | Daptomycin 256 mg/L plus either clindamycin 32 mg/L or quinupristin/dalfopristin 2 mg/L, or 3-drug combination |
1 Duration of treatment for 3 weeks. 2 Can be combined with an aminoglycoside.
Primer and Probe Sequences.
| Primer or Probe | Sequences 5’-->3’ |
|---|---|
| Primers | |
| Mycop 16S F | GGA GCT GGT AAT RCC CAA AGT C |
| Mycop 16S R | CCA TCC CCA CGT TCT CGT AG |
| OT 47-kDa F | CCA TCT AAT ACT GTA CTT GAA GCA GTT GA |
| OT 47-kDa R1 | GTC CTA AAT TCT CAT TTA ATT CTG GAG T |
| TG | GTG CAG TAT CTT CAG GTG ATG A |
| SFG | GGT GAC GAG GCT GTT GAY AAT G |
| TG/SFG | GGY IGT TTT TGC TTT ATA ACC AGC TA |
| Mycop ITS F | CCT AAG GYA GGA CTG GTG ACT GG |
| Mycop ITS R | CAC GTC CTT CWT CGA CTT TCA GAC |
| (sequencing) | |
| Probes | |
| Mycop 16S Ra | FAM-CCC AGT CAC CAG TCC TGC CTT AGG-BHQ1 |
| OT 47-kDa Rb1 | FAM-TCA TTA AGC/ZEN/ATA ACA TTT AAC ATA CCA CGA CGA-IBFQ |
| TG | MAX-TTC TGC GAT GTT ATA GAA AGG TTT AGC CCA- BHQ1 |
| SFG | Texas red-ATG TGC ATC AGT ATA GAA AGG TTT TGC CC-BHQ2 |
abc purchased from Biodesign (Bangkok, Thailand), Integrated DNA Technologies (Coralville, IA), and Eurogentec (Seraing, Belgium), respectively. 1 Reference [44].