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Antibacterial Peptide-Based Gel for Prevention of Medical Implanted-Device Infection

Implanted medical devices are prone to infection. Designing new strategies to reduce infection and implant rejection are an important challenge for modern medicine. To this end, in the last few years many hydrogels have been designed as matrices for antimicrobial molecules destined to fight frequent...

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Autores principales: Mateescu, Mihaela, Baixe, Sébastien, Garnier, Tony, Jierry, Loic, Ball, Vincent, Haikel, Youssef, Metz-Boutigue, Marie Hélène, Nardin, Michel, Schaaf, Pierre, Etienne, Olivier, Lavalle, Philippe
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4682826/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26659616
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0145143
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author Mateescu, Mihaela
Baixe, Sébastien
Garnier, Tony
Jierry, Loic
Ball, Vincent
Haikel, Youssef
Metz-Boutigue, Marie Hélène
Nardin, Michel
Schaaf, Pierre
Etienne, Olivier
Lavalle, Philippe
author_facet Mateescu, Mihaela
Baixe, Sébastien
Garnier, Tony
Jierry, Loic
Ball, Vincent
Haikel, Youssef
Metz-Boutigue, Marie Hélène
Nardin, Michel
Schaaf, Pierre
Etienne, Olivier
Lavalle, Philippe
author_sort Mateescu, Mihaela
collection PubMed
description Implanted medical devices are prone to infection. Designing new strategies to reduce infection and implant rejection are an important challenge for modern medicine. To this end, in the last few years many hydrogels have been designed as matrices for antimicrobial molecules destined to fight frequent infection found in moist environments like the oral cavity. In this study, two types of original hydrogels containing the antimicrobial peptide Cateslytin have been designed. The first hydrogel is based on alginate modified with catechol moieties (AC gel). The choice of these catechol functional groups which derive from mussel’s catechol originates from their strong adhesion properties on various surfaces. The second type of gel we tested is a mixture of alginate catechol and thiol-terminated Pluronic (AC/PlubisSH), a polymer derived from Pluronic, a well-known biocompatible polymer. This PlubisSH polymer has been chosen for its capacity to enhance the cohesion of the composition. These two gels offer new clinical uses, as they can be injected and jellify in a few minutes. Moreover, we show these gels strongly adhere to implant surfaces and gingiva. Once gelled, they demonstrate a high level of rheological properties and stability. In particular, the dissipative energy of the (AC/PlubisSH) gel detachment reaches a high value on gingiva (10 J.m(-2)) and on titanium alloys (4 J.m(-2)), conferring a strong mechanical barrier. Moreover, the Cateslytin peptide in hydrogels exhibited potent antimicrobial activities against P. gingivalis, where a strong inhibition of bacterial metabolic activity and viability was observed, indicating reduced virulence. Gel biocompatibility tests indicate no signs of toxicity. In conclusion, these new hydrogels could be ideal candidates in the prevention and/or management of periimplant diseases.
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spelling pubmed-46828262015-12-31 Antibacterial Peptide-Based Gel for Prevention of Medical Implanted-Device Infection Mateescu, Mihaela Baixe, Sébastien Garnier, Tony Jierry, Loic Ball, Vincent Haikel, Youssef Metz-Boutigue, Marie Hélène Nardin, Michel Schaaf, Pierre Etienne, Olivier Lavalle, Philippe PLoS One Research Article Implanted medical devices are prone to infection. Designing new strategies to reduce infection and implant rejection are an important challenge for modern medicine. To this end, in the last few years many hydrogels have been designed as matrices for antimicrobial molecules destined to fight frequent infection found in moist environments like the oral cavity. In this study, two types of original hydrogels containing the antimicrobial peptide Cateslytin have been designed. The first hydrogel is based on alginate modified with catechol moieties (AC gel). The choice of these catechol functional groups which derive from mussel’s catechol originates from their strong adhesion properties on various surfaces. The second type of gel we tested is a mixture of alginate catechol and thiol-terminated Pluronic (AC/PlubisSH), a polymer derived from Pluronic, a well-known biocompatible polymer. This PlubisSH polymer has been chosen for its capacity to enhance the cohesion of the composition. These two gels offer new clinical uses, as they can be injected and jellify in a few minutes. Moreover, we show these gels strongly adhere to implant surfaces and gingiva. Once gelled, they demonstrate a high level of rheological properties and stability. In particular, the dissipative energy of the (AC/PlubisSH) gel detachment reaches a high value on gingiva (10 J.m(-2)) and on titanium alloys (4 J.m(-2)), conferring a strong mechanical barrier. Moreover, the Cateslytin peptide in hydrogels exhibited potent antimicrobial activities against P. gingivalis, where a strong inhibition of bacterial metabolic activity and viability was observed, indicating reduced virulence. Gel biocompatibility tests indicate no signs of toxicity. In conclusion, these new hydrogels could be ideal candidates in the prevention and/or management of periimplant diseases. Public Library of Science 2015-12-14 /pmc/articles/PMC4682826/ /pubmed/26659616 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0145143 Text en © 2015 Mateescu et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mateescu, Mihaela
Baixe, Sébastien
Garnier, Tony
Jierry, Loic
Ball, Vincent
Haikel, Youssef
Metz-Boutigue, Marie Hélène
Nardin, Michel
Schaaf, Pierre
Etienne, Olivier
Lavalle, Philippe
Antibacterial Peptide-Based Gel for Prevention of Medical Implanted-Device Infection
title Antibacterial Peptide-Based Gel for Prevention of Medical Implanted-Device Infection
title_full Antibacterial Peptide-Based Gel for Prevention of Medical Implanted-Device Infection
title_fullStr Antibacterial Peptide-Based Gel for Prevention of Medical Implanted-Device Infection
title_full_unstemmed Antibacterial Peptide-Based Gel for Prevention of Medical Implanted-Device Infection
title_short Antibacterial Peptide-Based Gel for Prevention of Medical Implanted-Device Infection
title_sort antibacterial peptide-based gel for prevention of medical implanted-device infection
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4682826/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26659616
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0145143
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