4.8 Article

Small molecular adjuvants repurpose antibiotics towards Gram-negative bacterial infections and multispecies bacterial biofilms

Journal

CHEMICAL SCIENCE
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d3sc05124b

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Gram-negative bacterial infections with significant antibiotic resistance can be effectively treated by combining obsolete antibiotics with non-antibiotic adjuvants that target bacterial membranes. The development of a small molecular adjuvant with moderate membrane perturbation in bacterial cells and no toxicity to mammalian cells enhances the internalization of antibiotics and inhibits the efflux machinery, revitalizing the efficacy of various classes of antibiotics. This combination therapy demonstrates potent bactericidal activity against biofilms and multi-drug resistant infections, with good biocompatibility and antibacterial efficacy. The study highlights the potential of this approach for treating multi-drug resistant infections.
Gram-negative bacterial infections pose a significant challenge due to two major resistance elements, including the impermeability of the outer membrane and the overexpression of efflux pumps, which contribute to antibiotic resistance. Additionally, the coexistence of multispecies superbugs in mixed species biofilms further complicates treatment, as these infections are refractory to most antibiotics. To address this issue, combining obsolete antibiotics with non-antibiotic adjuvants that target bacterial membranes has shown promise in combating antibacterial resistance. However, the clinical translation of this cocktail therapy has been hindered by the toxicity associated with these membrane active adjuvants, mainly due to a limited understanding of their structure and mechanism of action. Towards this goal, herein, we have designed a small molecular adjuvant by tuning different structural parameters, such as the balance between hydrophilic and hydrophobic groups, spatial positioning of hydrophobicity and hydrogen bonding interactions, causing moderate membrane perturbation in bacterial cells without any toxicity to mammalian cells. Moderate membrane perturbation not only enhances the internalization of antibiotics, but also increases the intracellular concentration of drugs by hampering the efflux machinery. This revitalises the efficacy of various classes of antibiotics by 32-512 fold, without inducing toxicity. The leading combination not only exhibits potent bactericidal activity against A. baumannii biofilms but also effectively disrupts mature multispecies biofilms composed of A. baumannii and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), which is typically resistant to most antibiotics. Importantly, the combination therapy demonstrates good biocompatibility and excellent in vivo antibacterial efficacy (>99% reduction) in a skin infection model of A. baumannii. Interestingly, A. baumannii shows reduced susceptibility to develop resistance against the leading combination, underscoring its potential for treating multi-drug resistant infections.

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