| Literature DB >> 35100802 |
Boyan Lv1, Mengmeng Bian1, Xuebing Huang1, Fengqi Sun1, Yuanyuan Gao1, Yan Wang1, Yajuan Fu2, Bin Yang3, Xinmiao Fu1.
Abstract
Potentiation of traditional antibiotics is of significance for combating antibiotic-resistant bacteria that have become a severe threat to human and animal health. Here, we report that 1 min co-treatment with n-butanol greatly and specifically enhances the bactericidal action of aminoglycosides by 5 orders of magnitude against stationary-phase Staphylococcus aureus cells, with n-propanol and isobutanol showing less potency. This combined treatment also rapidly kills various S. aureus persisters, methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) cells, and numerous Gram-positive and -negative pathogens including some clinically isolated multidrug-resistant pathogens (e.g., S. aureus, Staphylococcus epidermidis, and Enterococcus faecalis) in vitro, as well as S. aureus in mice. Mechanistically, the potentiation results from the actions of aminoglycosides on their conventional target ribosome rather than the antiseptic effect of n-butanol and is achieved by rapidly enhancing the bacterial uptake of aminoglycosides, while salts and inhibitors of proton motive force (e.g., CCCP) can diminish this uptake. Importantly, such n-butanol-enhanced antibiotic uptake even enables subinhibitory concentrations of aminoglycosides to rapidly kill both MRSA and conventional S. aureus cells. Given n-butanol is a non-metabolite in the pathogens we tested, our work may open avenues to develop a metabolite-independent strategy for aminoglycoside potentiation to rapidly eliminate antibiotic-resistant/tolerant pathogens, as well as for reducing the toxicity associated with aminoglycoside use.Entities:
Keywords: Gram-positive bacteria; MRSA; aminoglycoside; antibiotic resistance; bacterial persister; n-butanol
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35100802 DOI: 10.1021/acsinfecdis.1c00559
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Infect Dis ISSN: 2373-8227 Impact factor: 5.084