| Literature DB >> 32397205 |
Adriana Vollaro1, Anna Esposito2, Eliana Pia Esposito3, Raffaele Zarrilli3, Annalisa Guaragna2, Eliana De Gregorio1.
Abstract
Pregnadiene-11-hydroxy-16α,17α-epoxy-3,20-dione-1 (PYED-1), a heterocyclic corticosteroid derivative of deflazacort, exhibits broad-spectrum antibacterial activity against Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria. Here, we investigated the effect of PYED-1 on the biofilms of Staphylococcus aureus, an etiological agent of biofilm-based chronic infections such as osteomyelitis, indwelling medical device infections, periodontitis, chronic wound infections, and endocarditis. PYED-1 caused a strong reduction in biofilm formation in a concentration dependent manner. Furthermore, it was also able to completely remove the preformed biofilm. Transcriptional analysis performed on the established biofilm revealed that PYED-1 downregulates the expression of genes related to quorum sensing (agrA, RNAIII, hld, psm, and sarA), surface proteins (clfB and fnbB), secreted toxins (hla, hlb, and lukD), and capsular polysaccharides (capC). The expression of genes that encode two main global regulators, sigB and saeR, was also significantly inhibited after treatment with PYED-1. In conclusion, PYED-1 not only effectively inhibited biofilm formation, but also eradicated preformed biofilms of S. aureus, modulating the expression of genes related to quorum sensing, surface and secreted proteins, and capsular polysaccharides. These results indicated that PYED-1 may have great potential as an effective antibiofilm agent to prevent S. aureus biofilm-associated infections.Entities:
Keywords: Staphylococcus aureus; antibiofilm activity; biofilm eradication agent; biofilm formation; corticosteroid; preformed biofilm
Year: 2020 PMID: 32397205 PMCID: PMC7277567 DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics9050240
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antibiotics (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6382
Figure 1Inhibitory effect of pregnadiene-11-hydroxy-16α,17α-epoxy-3,20-dione-1 (PYED-1) on S. aureus biofilm formation. (A) Biofilms were quantified after crystal-violet staining. Values are presented as means ±SDs. Asterisks indicate statistically significant differences between the treated and untreated biofilms (*p < 0.05 and **p < 0.01, respectively). (B) Confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) analysis of the biofilm formed by S. aureus ATCC 29213 in the absence (left upper panel) or presence of PYED-1, at the concentrations of 2 µg/mL (right upper panel), 4 µg/mL (left inferior panel), and 8 µg/mL (right inferior panel).
Figure 2Eradicating effect of PYED-1 on S. aureus preformed biofilm. Biofilm formed after 48 h in 96-well microplates was treated with different PYED-1 concentrations for 24 h at 37 °C under static conditions. (A) Biofilm biomass were measured by crystal violet (CV) staining. (B) Biofilm viability was measured by tetrazolium salt reduction (XTT) assay. Error bars represent the standard deviation (SD) of three independent experiments. Asterisks indicate statistically significant differences between the treated and untreated biofilms (**p < 0.01). (C) CLSM analysis of preformed S. aureus ATCC 29213 biofilm without treatment (left upper panel) or treated with PYED-1 at 16 µg/mL (right upper panel), 32 µg/mL (left inferior panel), and 64 µg/mL (right inferior panel) for 24 h.
Figure 3Transcriptional profile changes in S. aureus after treatment with PYED-1, determined by qRT-PCR with respect to rpoB expression. Fold-changes were calculated using treated versus untreated S. aureus cells. Gene descriptions, fold changes, standard deviations (SD), and p-values are reported in Table 1.
RT-PCR analysis of biofilm gene expression in S. aureus ATCC 29213 in the presence of PYED-1.
| Gene | Description | Fold Change ± SD | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| clumping factor B | −5.44 ± 0.011 | 0.0004 |
|
| fibronectin-binding protein B | −2.03 ± 0.029 | 0.0025 |
|
| capsule biosynthesis protein C | −2.22 ± 0.027 | 0.0019 |
|
| holin-like murein hydrolase modulator | −14.67 ± 0.004 | <0.0001 |
|
| antiholin-like protein B | +2.65 ± 0.160 | 0.0013 |
|
| peptidoglycan hydrolase | −2.09 ± 0.028 | 0.0022 |
|
| aureolysin, zinc metalloproteinase | −1.32 ± 0.045 | 0.0155 |
|
| immunodominant staphylococcal antigen | −12.06 ± 0.005 | <0.0001 |
|
| Transcriptional regulator | −3.77 ± 0.016 | 0.0007 |
|
| RNA polymerase sigma factor B | −2.67 ± 0.022 | 0.0013 |
|
| response regulator SaeR | −3.34 ± 0.018 | 0.0008 |
|
| accessory gene regulator protein A | −22.99 ± 0.002 | 0.0001 |
|
| small regulatory RNA | −108.14 ± 0.0005 | <0.0001 |
|
| delta-haemolysin gene | −143.04 ± 0.0004 | <0.0001 |
|
| alpha-haemolysin | −2.41 ± 0.025 | 0.0016 |
|
| beta-haemolysin | −3.83 ± 0.015 | 0.0007 |
|
| pore-forming leukocidin | −2.56 ± 0.023 | 0.0014 |
|
| Phenol-soluble modulin | −20.54 ± 0.002 | 0.0001 |
|
| Transcriptional regulator | −3.77 ± 0.016 | 0.0007 |
Gene target list and oligonucleotide sequences.
| Gene | Forward primer (5’-3’) | Reverse primer (5’-3’) |
|---|---|---|
| TGCGAAGACGATCCAAAAC | TTTAGCTTGCTCAAGCACCTC | |
|
| GATGGTCGCACATTCACAAG | CGCCTGACTGGTCCTTATATTC |
| CATCCAGAGCGGAATAAAGC | CGGAAATACCCGCTAATGAC | |
| CTTAGCCGGCAGTATTGTTG | GTTTGCACCGTCTTCTACCC | |
| TTATGGTGGTGGAAGTGCTG | TGGACTTGGTTCTGGATCTG | |
| GAACATGGTCAAGCACAAGG | ACGCCATAATTACCGTGACC | |
|
| TCTTGGAACCCGGTATATGG | AGCGAAGTCTGGTGAAAACC |
|
| GTGCCAAAGCCGAATCTAAG | ATCAGCGCGTTTATATTGTCC |
|
| AAGGAAGGAGTGATTTCAATGG | TTTGTTCACTGTGTCGATAATCC |
| TCCGACAAACACTGTTGACC | AATCCCCAAGCACCTAAACC | |
| TATTGCCCGAGGATTAGCAC | CAAAGACAGGCACAACTGCTAC | |
| ACGGTGTCGACTATGCAATG | ATTGCCGCCACCATAGTTAC | |
| GTACTTAAGGCAGCCGGAAAC | CGCCCCAATAAAACTGTGAG | |
|
| TCAAAAGCTTAATCGAACAATTCAC | AATGGCCCCCTTCAAATAAG |
|
| AAGCCATCCCAACTTAATAACC | GCACTGAGTCCAAGGAAACTAAC |
| ACAACCACTTGGCGGTAAAG | ATGCTTCAAGTGCCCATACC | |
| TTGCTTTGAGTTGTTATCAATGG | CAATACAGCGAATTCTTCAAAGC | |
| CCAAGGGAACTCGTTTTACG | ACGCATAGGGACTTCGTGAC | |
| TGATCGCGAACGAGAAATC | ATTGCCGTTCTCTGAAGTCG |