| Literature DB >> 32893500 |
Miao Pan1, Chao Lu2,3, Maochao Zheng1, Wen Zhou1, Fuling Song1, Weidong Chen1, Fen Yao1, Daojun Liu1, Jianfeng Cai3.
Abstract
Peptide-based antimicrobial materials are recognized as promising alternatives to antibiotics to circumvent the emergence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria or to combat multiple resistant bacteria by targeting the bacterial cell membrane. The components and conformations of antimicrobial peptides are extensively explored to achieve broad-spectrum and effective antimicrobial activity. Here, star-shaped antimicrobial polypeptides are fabricated by employing homologs of poly(l-lysine)s (i.e., poly(l-ornithine)s, poly(l-lysine)s, and poly(l-α,ζ-diaminoheptylic acid)s) with the aim of modulating their charge/hydrophobicity balance and rationalizing their structure-antimicrobial property relationships. The in vitro antibacterial investigation reveals that unnatural amino-acid-based star-shaped poly(l-ornithine)s have remarkable proteolytic stability, excellent biofilm-disrupting capacity, and broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity, even against difficult-to-kill Gram-negative Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Furthermore, star-shaped poly(l-ornithine)s significantly reduce the microbial burden and improve the burn wound healing of mouse skin infected with P. aeruginosa. These results demonstrate that unnatural amino-acid-based star-shaped poly(l-ornithine)s can serve as emerging long-term and biofilm-disrupting antimicrobial agents to treat biofilm-related infections in burn, especially caused by notorious P. aeruginosa.Entities:
Keywords: Pseudomonas aeruginosa; biofilms; poly(l-ornithine)s; proteolytic stability; star-shaped antimicrobials
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32893500 DOI: 10.1002/adhm.202000647
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Healthc Mater ISSN: 2192-2640 Impact factor: 9.933