TY - JOUR
T1 - Increased antibiotic efficacy and noninvasive monitoring of Staphylococcus epidermidis biofilms using per-cysteamine-substituted γ-cyclodextrin – A delivery effect validated by fluorescence microscopy
AU - Thomsen, Hanna
AU - Agnes, Marco
AU - Uwangue, Owens
AU - Persson, Linnéa
AU - Mattsson, Matilda
AU - Graf, Fabrice
AU - Kasimati, Eleni Marina
AU - Yannakopoulou, Konstantina
AU - Ericson, Marica B.
AU - Farewell, Anne
PY - 2020/9/25
Y1 - 2020/9/25
N2 - Limited and poor delivery of antibiotics is cited as one reason for the difficulty in treating antibiotic-resistant biofilms associated with chronic infections. We investigate the effectiveness of a positively charged, single isomer cyclodextrin derivative, octakis[6-(2-aminoethylthio)-6-deoxy]-γ-CD (γCys) to improve the delivery of antibiotics to biofilms. Using multiphoton laser scanning microscopy complemented with super-resolution fluorescence microscopy, we showed that γCys tagged with fluorescein (FITC) is uniformly distributed throughout live S. epidermidis biofilm cultures in vitro and results suggest it is localized extracellularly in the biofilm matrix. NMR spectroscopic data in aqueous solution confirm that γCys forms inclusion complexes with both the antibiotics oxacillin and rifampicin. Efficacy of γCys/antibiotic (oxacillin and rifampicin) was measured in the biofilms. While treatment with γCys/oxacillin had little improvement over oxacillin alone, γCys/rifampicin reduced the biofilm viability to background levels demonstrating a remarkable improvement over rifampicin alone. The strong synergistic effect for γCys/rifampicin is at this stage not clearly understood, but plausible explanations are related to increased solubility of rifampicin upon complexation and/or synergistic interference with components of the biofilm. The results demonstrate that designed cyclodextrin nanocarriers, like γCys, efficiently deliver suitable antibiotics to biofilms and that fluorescence microscopy offers a novel approach for mechanistic investigations.
AB - Limited and poor delivery of antibiotics is cited as one reason for the difficulty in treating antibiotic-resistant biofilms associated with chronic infections. We investigate the effectiveness of a positively charged, single isomer cyclodextrin derivative, octakis[6-(2-aminoethylthio)-6-deoxy]-γ-CD (γCys) to improve the delivery of antibiotics to biofilms. Using multiphoton laser scanning microscopy complemented with super-resolution fluorescence microscopy, we showed that γCys tagged with fluorescein (FITC) is uniformly distributed throughout live S. epidermidis biofilm cultures in vitro and results suggest it is localized extracellularly in the biofilm matrix. NMR spectroscopic data in aqueous solution confirm that γCys forms inclusion complexes with both the antibiotics oxacillin and rifampicin. Efficacy of γCys/antibiotic (oxacillin and rifampicin) was measured in the biofilms. While treatment with γCys/oxacillin had little improvement over oxacillin alone, γCys/rifampicin reduced the biofilm viability to background levels demonstrating a remarkable improvement over rifampicin alone. The strong synergistic effect for γCys/rifampicin is at this stage not clearly understood, but plausible explanations are related to increased solubility of rifampicin upon complexation and/or synergistic interference with components of the biofilm. The results demonstrate that designed cyclodextrin nanocarriers, like γCys, efficiently deliver suitable antibiotics to biofilms and that fluorescence microscopy offers a novel approach for mechanistic investigations.
KW - Antibiotic resistance
KW - Cyclodextrins
KW - Microbial biofilms
KW - Multiphoton microscopy
KW - Oxacillin
KW - Rifampicin
KW - Staphylococcus
KW - Super-resolution optical microscopy
U2 - 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2020.119646
DO - 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2020.119646
M3 - Article
SN - 0378-5173
VL - 587
JO - International Journal of Pharmaceutics
JF - International Journal of Pharmaceutics
M1 - 119646
ER -