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Synergistic use of anti-inflammatory ketorolac and gentamicin to target staphylococcal biofilms

BACKGROUND: While antibiotics remain our primary tools against microbial infection, increasing antibiotic resistance (inherent and acquired) is a major detriment to their efficacy. A practical approach to maintaining or reversing the efficacy of antibiotics is the use of other commonly used therapeu...

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Autores principales: Sekar, Amita, Gil, Dmitry, Tierney, Peyton Anne, McCanne, Madeline, Daesety, Vikram, Trendafilova, Darina, Muratoglu, Orhun K, Oral, Ebru
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Journal Experts 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10635368/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37961705
http://dx.doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-3471646/v1
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author Sekar, Amita
Gil, Dmitry
Tierney, Peyton Anne
McCanne, Madeline
Daesety, Vikram
Trendafilova, Darina
Muratoglu, Orhun K
Oral, Ebru
author_facet Sekar, Amita
Gil, Dmitry
Tierney, Peyton Anne
McCanne, Madeline
Daesety, Vikram
Trendafilova, Darina
Muratoglu, Orhun K
Oral, Ebru
author_sort Sekar, Amita
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: While antibiotics remain our primary tools against microbial infection, increasing antibiotic resistance (inherent and acquired) is a major detriment to their efficacy. A practical approach to maintaining or reversing the efficacy of antibiotics is the use of other commonly used therapeutics, which show synergistic antibacterial action with antibiotics. Here, we investigated the extent of antibacterial synergy between the antibiotic gentamicin and the anti-inflammatory ketorolac regarding the dynamics of biofilm growth, the rate of acquired resistance, and the possible mechanism of synergy. METHODS: Control (ATCC 12600, ATCC 35984) and clinical strains (L1101, L1116) of S. aureus and S. epidermidis with varying antibiotic susceptibility profiles were used in this study to simulate implant-material associated low-risk and high-risk biofilms in vitro. The synergistic action of gentamicin sulfate (GS) and ketorolac tromethamine (KT), against planktonic staphylococcal strains were determined using the fractional inhibitory concentration measurement assay. Nascent (6hr) and established (24hr) biofilms were grown on 316 stainless steel plates and the synergistic biofilm eradication activity was determined and characterized using adherent bacteria count, MBEC measurement for GS, gene expression of biofilm-associated genes, visualization by live/dead imaging, scanning electron microscopy, and bacterial membrane fluidity assessment. RESULTS: Gentamicin-ketorolac combination demonstrated synergistic antibacterial action against planktonic Staphylococci. Control and clinical strains showed distinct biofilm growth dynamics and an increase in biofilm maturity was shown to confer further resistance to gentamicin for both ‘low-risk’ and ‘high-risk’ biofilms. The addition of ketorolac enhanced the antibiofilm activity of gentamicin against acquired resistance in staphylococcal biofilms. Mechanistic studies revealed that the synergistic action of gentamicin-ketorolac interferes with biofilm morphology and subverts bacterial stress response altering bacterial physiology, membrane dynamics, and biofilm properties. CONCLUSION: The results of this study have a significant impact on the local administration of antibiotics and other therapeutic agents commonly used in the prevention and treatment of orthopaedic infections. Further, these results warrant the study of synergy for the concurrent or sequential administration of non-antibiotic drugs for antimicrobial effect.
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spelling pubmed-106353682023-11-13 Synergistic use of anti-inflammatory ketorolac and gentamicin to target staphylococcal biofilms Sekar, Amita Gil, Dmitry Tierney, Peyton Anne McCanne, Madeline Daesety, Vikram Trendafilova, Darina Muratoglu, Orhun K Oral, Ebru Res Sq Article BACKGROUND: While antibiotics remain our primary tools against microbial infection, increasing antibiotic resistance (inherent and acquired) is a major detriment to their efficacy. A practical approach to maintaining or reversing the efficacy of antibiotics is the use of other commonly used therapeutics, which show synergistic antibacterial action with antibiotics. Here, we investigated the extent of antibacterial synergy between the antibiotic gentamicin and the anti-inflammatory ketorolac regarding the dynamics of biofilm growth, the rate of acquired resistance, and the possible mechanism of synergy. METHODS: Control (ATCC 12600, ATCC 35984) and clinical strains (L1101, L1116) of S. aureus and S. epidermidis with varying antibiotic susceptibility profiles were used in this study to simulate implant-material associated low-risk and high-risk biofilms in vitro. The synergistic action of gentamicin sulfate (GS) and ketorolac tromethamine (KT), against planktonic staphylococcal strains were determined using the fractional inhibitory concentration measurement assay. Nascent (6hr) and established (24hr) biofilms were grown on 316 stainless steel plates and the synergistic biofilm eradication activity was determined and characterized using adherent bacteria count, MBEC measurement for GS, gene expression of biofilm-associated genes, visualization by live/dead imaging, scanning electron microscopy, and bacterial membrane fluidity assessment. RESULTS: Gentamicin-ketorolac combination demonstrated synergistic antibacterial action against planktonic Staphylococci. Control and clinical strains showed distinct biofilm growth dynamics and an increase in biofilm maturity was shown to confer further resistance to gentamicin for both ‘low-risk’ and ‘high-risk’ biofilms. The addition of ketorolac enhanced the antibiofilm activity of gentamicin against acquired resistance in staphylococcal biofilms. Mechanistic studies revealed that the synergistic action of gentamicin-ketorolac interferes with biofilm morphology and subverts bacterial stress response altering bacterial physiology, membrane dynamics, and biofilm properties. CONCLUSION: The results of this study have a significant impact on the local administration of antibiotics and other therapeutic agents commonly used in the prevention and treatment of orthopaedic infections. Further, these results warrant the study of synergy for the concurrent or sequential administration of non-antibiotic drugs for antimicrobial effect. American Journal Experts 2023-10-26 /pmc/articles/PMC10635368/ /pubmed/37961705 http://dx.doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-3471646/v1 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which allows reusers to distribute, remix, adapt, and build upon the material in any medium or format, so long as attribution is given to the creator. The license allows for commercial use.
spellingShingle Article
Sekar, Amita
Gil, Dmitry
Tierney, Peyton Anne
McCanne, Madeline
Daesety, Vikram
Trendafilova, Darina
Muratoglu, Orhun K
Oral, Ebru
Synergistic use of anti-inflammatory ketorolac and gentamicin to target staphylococcal biofilms
title Synergistic use of anti-inflammatory ketorolac and gentamicin to target staphylococcal biofilms
title_full Synergistic use of anti-inflammatory ketorolac and gentamicin to target staphylococcal biofilms
title_fullStr Synergistic use of anti-inflammatory ketorolac and gentamicin to target staphylococcal biofilms
title_full_unstemmed Synergistic use of anti-inflammatory ketorolac and gentamicin to target staphylococcal biofilms
title_short Synergistic use of anti-inflammatory ketorolac and gentamicin to target staphylococcal biofilms
title_sort synergistic use of anti-inflammatory ketorolac and gentamicin to target staphylococcal biofilms
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10635368/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37961705
http://dx.doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-3471646/v1
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