基于肽的探针在细菌生物膜相关感染的体内诊断成像中的评价

IF 3.8 2区 医学 Q2 CHEMISTRY, MEDICINAL
Landon W. Locke*, Kothandaraman Shankaran, Li Gong, Paul Stoodley, Samuel L. Vozar, Sara L. Cole, Michael F. Tweedle, Daniel J. Wozniak
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引用次数: 10

摘要

细菌生物膜感染的临床管理在当今的医疗环境中是一个巨大的挑战。美国国立卫生研究院估计,65%的细菌感染与生物膜有关,治疗结果与早期干预呈正相关。目前,还没有可靠的成像技术来检测体内的生物膜感染,并且目前没有准确和直接的生物膜鉴定的临床方案。例如,在骨科植入物相关的生物膜感染中,目前的检测方法是基于非特异性x射线或放射性标记的白细胞成像,再加上侵入性采集的假体周围组织或液体样本,并且必须培养。这种方法耗时长,而且由于采样误差和缺乏灵敏度,常常无法检测到生物膜细菌。通过实时无创成像来量化细菌生物膜的能力是一个迫切的未满足的临床需求,它将彻底改变这些破坏性感染类型的管理和治疗。在本研究中,我们收集了一系列荧光标记的候选肽,以特异性地探索它们的生物膜靶向特性。我们使用各种体外实验来评估这些荧光标记肽对模型细菌病原体铜绿假单胞菌产生的生物膜的特异性和非破坏性的靶向能力。在人类细胞感染模型中,4Iphf-HN17表现出快速的生物膜标记动力学,缺乏杀菌活性和生物膜靶向特异性。体内荧光标记的4Iphf-HN17在生物膜感染的伤口中积累增强,因此值得进一步研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Evaluation of Peptide-Based Probes toward In Vivo Diagnostic Imaging of Bacterial Biofilm-Associated Infections

Evaluation of Peptide-Based Probes toward In Vivo Diagnostic Imaging of Bacterial Biofilm-Associated Infections

The clinical management of bacterial biofilm infections represents an enormous challenge in today’s healthcare setting. The NIH estimates that 65% of bacterial infections are biofilm-related, and therapeutic outcomes are positively correlated with early intervention. Currently, there is no reliable imaging technique to detect biofilm infections in vivo, and current clinical protocols for accurate and direct biofilm identification are nonexistent. In orthopedic implant-associated biofilm infections, for example, current detection methods are based on nonspecific X-ray or radiolabeled white blood cell imaging, coupled with peri-prosthetic tissue or fluid samples taken invasively, and must be cultured. This approach is time-consuming and often fails to detect biofilm bacteria due to sampling errors and a lack of sensitivity. The ability to quantify bacterial biofilms by real-time noninvasive imaging is an urgent unmet clinical need that would revolutionize the management and treatment of these devastating types of infections. In the present study, we assembled a collection of fluorescently labeled peptide candidates to specifically explore their biofilm targeting properties. We evaluated these fluorescently labeled peptides using various in vitro assays for their ability to specifically and nondestructively target biofilms produced by model bacterial pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The lead candidate that emerged, 4Iphf-HN17, demonstrated rapid biofilm labeling kinetics, a lack of bactericidal activity, and biofilm targeting specificity in human cell infection models. In vivo fluorescently labeled 4Iphf-HN17 showed enhanced accumulation in biofilm-infected wounds, thus warranting further study.

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来源期刊
ACS Infectious Diseases
ACS Infectious Diseases CHEMISTRY, MEDICINALINFECTIOUS DISEASES&nb-INFECTIOUS DISEASES
CiteScore
9.70
自引率
3.80%
发文量
213
期刊介绍: ACS Infectious Diseases will be the first journal to highlight chemistry and its role in this multidisciplinary and collaborative research area. The journal will cover a diverse array of topics including, but not limited to: * Discovery and development of new antimicrobial agents — identified through target- or phenotypic-based approaches as well as compounds that induce synergy with antimicrobials. * Characterization and validation of drug target or pathways — use of single target and genome-wide knockdown and knockouts, biochemical studies, structural biology, new technologies to facilitate characterization and prioritization of potential drug targets. * Mechanism of drug resistance — fundamental research that advances our understanding of resistance; strategies to prevent resistance. * Mechanisms of action — use of genetic, metabolomic, and activity- and affinity-based protein profiling to elucidate the mechanism of action of clinical and experimental antimicrobial agents. * Host-pathogen interactions — tools for studying host-pathogen interactions, cellular biochemistry of hosts and pathogens, and molecular interactions of pathogens with host microbiota. * Small molecule vaccine adjuvants for infectious disease. * Viral and bacterial biochemistry and molecular biology.
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