西索米星
微生物学
铜绿假单胞菌
生物膜
抗生素
抗菌剂
化学
药理学
庆大霉素
生物
细菌
妥布霉素
遗传学
作者
Pengfei She,Shijia Li,Yaqian Liu,Lei Xu,Linying Zhou,Xianghai Zeng,Yimin Li,Shasha Li,Zehao Li,Zubiar Hussain,Yong Wu
标识
DOI:10.1007/s00284-021-02729-w
摘要
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a ubiquitous bacterium found in hospitals and the surrounding environment. The ability of P. aeruginosa to form biofilms confers high-level resistance to antibiotics, and the persister cells formed in the presence of high antibacterial drug concentrations make P. aeruginosa-related infections more refractory. Further, there rarely is an effective antimicrobial alternative when biofilm- and persister cell-targeting treatment fails. Using a high-throughput screening assay, we previously identified fluoroquinolones sitafloxacin, prulifloxacin, and tosufloxacin as well as aminoglycoside sisomicin among FDA-approved drugs with significant bactericidal activity against P. aeruginosa. In addition, in our current study, these antibiotics exhibited an effective time- and dose-dependent eradication effects against the preformed biofilms of P. aeruginosa at the concentrations of 2-4 μM. These agents also exhibited bactericidal efficacy against CCCP-induced P. aeruginosa persister cells with the viable cell count decreased from 9.14 log10 CFU/mL to 6.15 (sitafloxacin), 7.59 (prulifloxacin), 4.27 (tosufloxacin), and 6.17 (sisomicin) log10 CFU/mL, respectively, following 4 h of treatment. Furthermore, sisomicin was also effective against conventional antibiotics induced persister cells in a time-dependent manner within 24 h. In addition, we confirmed the in vivo anti-biofilm efficacy of the identified antibiotics in a subcutaneous implantation biofilm-related infection model. Tosufloxacin exhibited the greatest in vivo bactericidal activity against P. aeruginosa biofilms with a reduction of 4.54 ΔLog10 CFU/mL compared to the vehicle group, followed by prulifloxacin, sitafloxacin, and sisomicin. Taken together, our results indicate that sitafloxacin, prulifloxacin, tosufloxacin, and sisomicin have great potential as alternatives for the treatment of refractory infections caused by P. aeruginosa biofilms and persister cells.
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