抗菌蓝光:治疗多药耐药淋球菌感染的替代疗法?

Ying Wang, Raquel Ferrer-Espada, Y. Gu, T. Dai
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引用次数: 9

摘要

淋病是全球第二常见的性传播感染。淋病奈瑟菌是淋病的病原体,它正在进化成一种超级细菌,由于对几乎所有可用的抗生素都有耐药性,可能无法治疗。迫切需要开发替代疗法。这项试点研究旨在研究一种创新的非抗生素方法——抗菌蓝光(aBL)作为淋球菌感染的替代治疗方法的潜力。我们研究了一株ATCC菌株(ATCC 700825)和一株耐多药临床淋球菌菌株。结果表明,这两株菌株在405nm处对aBL高度敏感。在浮游悬浮液中,暴露于45J/cm2 aBL使ATCC 700825的菌落形成单位(CFU)的存活率降低7.16-log10,使临床菌株的菌落形成单元的存活率减少2.48-log10。当aBL暴露进一步增加到54J/cm2时,ATCC 700825实现了CFU的完全根除(超过8-log10 CFU的减少),并且临床菌株获得了5.43-log10 CFU的减少。此外,我们观察到单线态氧在aBL对淋球菌的抗菌作用中起着至关重要的作用。总之,这项初步研究的结果表明,aBL是一种很有前途的对抗淋球菌感染的方法。在分析淋球菌细胞中的内源性光敏剂、在动物模型中评估aBL对淋球菌感染的疗效以及研究aBL的作用机制方面,有必要进行进一步的研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Antimicrobial Blue Light: An Alternative Therapeutic for Multidrug-Resistant Gonococcal Infections?
Gonorrhea is the second most prevalent sexually transmitted infection globally. Neisseria gonorrhoeae, the etiological agent of gonorrhea, is evolving into a superbug and may become untreatable due to its resistance to almost all the antibiotics available. There is a critical need for the development of alternative therapeutics. This pilot study aimed to investigate the potential of an innovative non-antibiotic approach, antimicrobial blue light (aBL), as an alternative therapeutic for gonococcal infections. We studied one ATCC strain (ATCC 700825) and one multidrug-resistant clinical strain of N. gonorrhoeae. The results demonstrated that both the strains are highly susceptible to aBL at 405nm. In planktonic suspensions, an exposure of 45 J/cm2 aBL reduced the survival fraction of colony-forming units (CFU) by 7.16-log10 for ATCC 700825 and 2.48-log10 for the clinical strain. When the aBL exposure was further increased to 54 J/cm2, a complete eradication of CFU (over 8-log10 CFU reduction) was achieved for ATCC 700825 and a reduction of 5.43-log10 CFU was obtained for the clinical strain. In addition, we observed that singlet oxygen plays a vital role in the antimicrobial effect of aBL on N. gonorrhoeae. In conclusion, the results of this pilot study suggest that aBL is a promising approach to combat gonococcal infections. Further studies are warranted in the analysis of the endogenous photosensitizers in N. gonorrhoeae cells, evaluation of the aBL efficacy against gonococcal infections in animal models, and investigation of the mechanism of action of aBL.
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