| Literature DB >> 35892912 |
Syeda Tasmia Asma1, Kálmán Imre2, Adriana Morar2, Viorel Herman3, Ulas Acaroz1, Hamid Mukhtar4, Damla Arslan-Acaroz5, Syed Rizwan Ali Shah6, Robin Gerlach7.
Abstract
Biofilm formation on surfaces via microbial colonization causes infections and has become a major health issue globally. The biofilm lifestyle provides resistance to environmental stresses and antimicrobial therapies. Biofilms can cause several chronic conditions, and effective treatment has become a challenge due to increased antimicrobial resistance. Antibiotics available for treating biofilm-associated infections are generally not very effective and require high doses that may cause toxicity in the host. Therefore, it is essential to study and develop efficient anti-biofilm strategies that can significantly reduce the rate of biofilm-associated healthcare problems. In this context, some effective combating strategies with potential anti-biofilm agents, including plant extracts, peptides, enzymes, lantibiotics, chelating agents, biosurfactants, polysaccharides, organic, inorganic, and metal nanoparticles, etc., have been reviewed to overcome biofilm-associated healthcare problems. From their extensive literature survey, it can be concluded that these molecules with considerable structural alterations might be applied to the treatment of biofilm-associated infections, by evaluating their significant delivery to the target site of the host. To design effective anti-biofilm molecules, it must be assured that the minimum inhibitory concentrations of these anti-biofilm compounds can eradicate biofilm-associated infections without causing toxic effects at a significant rate.Entities:
Keywords: antibiofilm agents; antibiotic resistance; antibodies; biofilms; combating strategies; nanomaterials; natural products
Year: 2022 PMID: 35892912 PMCID: PMC9394423 DOI: 10.3390/life12081110
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Life (Basel) ISSN: 2075-1729
Figure 1Phases of biofilm formation.
Some anti-biofilm compounds, their source, and a list of bacteria for which these compounds have demonstrated treatment efficacy.
| Antibiofilm Molecule | Source of Molecule | Susceptible Microorganism | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antibiotics and Lantibiotics | Epidermin |
| [ | |
| Gallidermin |
| |||
| Nisin |
|
| ||
| Polymyxin B |
|
| ||
| Polymyxin E (Colistin) |
|
| ||
| Subtilin |
| |||
| Biosurfactant | Sophorolipid | Produced on microbial cells |
| [ |
| Chelating agents | Disodium-EDTA, | - | [ | |
| Enzymes | Deoxyribo-nuclease I, | - |
| [ |
| Naturally derived and some other molecules |
| Extract |
| [ |
|
| Plant extract |
| [ | |
| Berberine |
| [ | ||
| Capparis spinosa | Caper bush extract | [ | ||
| Casbane diterpene | [ | |||
| Curcumin |
|
| [ | |
| Ellagic acid |
|
| [ | |
| Epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) | [ | |||
| Esculetin |
|
| [ | |
| Eugenol | [ | |||
| Fiestin |
|
| [ | |
| Quercetin |
|
| [ | |
| Reserpine |
|
| [ | |
| Synthetic halogenated furanone (F-56) | Derived from natural furanone |
| [ | |
| Usnic acid |
|
| [ | |
| Peptides | Antimicrobial peptide (AMP, LL-37) | Human cationic host defense peptide |
| [ |
| Buforin-II | Derived from stomach tissue (Buforin-I) of | Gram-negative bacteria | ||
| Indolocidin | Isolated from bovine neutrophil-cytoplasmic granules | |||
| Lytic peptide (PTP-7) | Synthetic analog from | |||
| PMAP-23 |
| |||
| PR-39 | Pig’s small intestine | |||
| Sushi peptide | Factor C (sushi-3) | |||
| Microcin-B17 |
| |||
| Peptide 1018 | - |
| [ | |
| Polysaccharides | CFT073 Group-II Capsular Polysaccharide |
| [ | |
| Pel Polysaccharide, |
|
| ||
| Metallic nanocomposites | Zn-CuO | Chemical synthesis |
| [ |
| Inorganic NPs | Ag NPs | Chemical synthesis |
| [ |
| Organic NPs | Quaternary ammonium chitosan NPs, PEG stabilized lipid NPs | Chemical synthesis |
| [ |
Modes of actions followed by several anti-biofilms.
| Serial. No. | Mode of Action | Associated Agents | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | AHL-mediated QS inhibition | Halogenated furanones, Flavonoids (quercetin) | [ |
| 2 | Membrane permeabilization or potential alteration | Lytic peptides (PTP-7), Lantibiotics (gallidermin, nisin), Biosurfactants (sophorolipids), Organic NPs (e.g., Quaternary ammonium chitosan NPs, PEG stabilized lipid NPs) | [ |
| 3 | Peptidoglycan cleavage | Epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG), Tannic acid, Endolysins | [ |
| 4 | Inhibition of bacterial cell division and their survival | Microcin-B17, Pyrrhocoricin | [ |
| 5 | Bacterial inhibition via biofilm disassembly | Extracellular proteases (Esp, sarA, sigB), D-tyrosine, Nucleases, Anti-amyloids, A cyclic auto inducing peptide (AIP), Ethyl pyruvate | [ |
| 6 | Biofilm inhibition via polysaccharides | Pel and Psl, PAM galactan, ESP-273, K2 Polysaccharides | [ |
| 7 | Bacterial stringent response inhibition | Peptide-1018, Peptide-1038 | [ |
| 8 | Cyclic di-GMP System signaling inhibition | LP-1062, LP-3134, LP-3145, LP-4010 | [ |
| 9 | Enzymatic dispersal of the extracellular polysaccharide substance (EPS) of matrix biofilm | Dispersin-B, DNase-I, Inorganic NPs (e.g., Ag NPs, Au NPs) | [ |
| 10 | Lipopolysaccharide disassembly or neutralization | Polymyxin-B and E, Lytic peptide, Gramicidin-S | [ |
Figure 2Chemical structures of some anti-biofilm compounds that inhibit AHL-mediated QS. (a) AHL, (b) triazole dihydro furanone, (c) synthetic halogenated furanone, (d) EGCG, (e) ellagic acid.
Figure 3QS in Gram-negative bacteria; some bacteria can secrete AHL that enters neighboring cells and induce the QS-mediated formation of virulence factors and biofilm development.
Figure 4Chemical structures of some anti-biofilm compounds that inhibit AHL-mediated QS. (a) quercetin, (b) curcumin, (c) allicin, (d) ajoene, (e) baicalin hydrate.
Figure 5Mechanism of action of AMPs on the membrane system of Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria. In Gram-negative bacteria, the AMP outreach the cytoplasmic membrane via permeabilizing the outer membrane, while in Gram-positive bacteria, the AMP directly disperses through nano ranged pores of the peptidoglycan layer. After binding to the inner membrane, APMs can create three types of pores (barrel-stave pore, toroidal pore, or carpet model). Adapted from Jianguo et al. 2017, [131].
Biosurfactants inhibiting biofilm formation.
| Biosurfactant | Source | Effective Against | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Coryxin |
| [ | |
| Pontifactin |
| [ | |
| Rhamnolipid |
| [ | |
| Sophorolipid |
| [ | |
| Surfactin, iturin, and fengycin |
| Biofilm formation of uropathogenic bacteria | [ |
| NS |
| Treatment of seven days old biofilms | [ |
| NS |
| [ |
NS-Not specified.
Some natural products as anti-biofilm molecules along with their target organisms and antibiofilm effects.
| Plant Extracts | Target Organisms | Anti-Biofilm Effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| Reduced the adherence of | [ |
| Erianin |
| Inhibited cell adherence by down-regulating Sortase A | [ |
| Hordenine |
| Obstructed QS-linked phenotypes to decrease virulence factors and biofilm development | [ |
|
|
| Antimicrobial, anti-biofilm, and antioxidant activities | [ |
| Parthenolide |
| Inhibited QS-linked gene expression (LasR, Lasl, RhlR and RhlI) and induced extracellular polymeric substance downregulation | [ |
| Patriniae |
| Reduced EPS synthesis and inhibited biofilm formation | [ |
| Phloretin |
| Anti-biofilm formation | [ |
| Quercetin |
| Blocked Sortase A functioning, sialic acid synthesis, and impaired | [ |
Figure 6Anti-biofilm activity of surface engineered NPs with different antimicrobial effects (adapted from Lee et al. [244]).
Nanotechnology-based materials for the control and treatment of biofilm-associated infections.
| Nanomaterials | Mode of Action | Antibiofilm | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Organic NPs | PEG stabilized lipid NPs, | Disrupt the biofilms by inducing ion-exchange via penetrating the cell membrane | Bones, | [ |
| Inorganic NPs | Au NPs | Positive surface-charge damages the EPS network. | Catheters | [ |
| Metallic nanocomposites | Zn-CuO nanocoating, | Released Ag ions inhibit biofilm formation. | Contact lenses, | [ |
Figure 7Chemical structures of the anti-biofilm compounds with unknown mode of action; (a) fisetin, (b) esculetin, (c) octenidine hydrochloride.