The biofilm matrix at sub-inhibitory concentrations of vancomycin

Staphylococcus epidermidis biofilm formation is a primary cause of medical device infections, which are persistent and difficult to eradicate because biofilms intrinsically exhibit a naturally high level of antibiotic resistance. Although biofilm antibiotic resistance or tolerance is a multifactoria...

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Main Author: Doroshenko, Natalya
Other Authors: Stoodley, Paul
Published: University of Southampton 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.628711
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6287112018-09-05T03:26:22ZThe biofilm matrix at sub-inhibitory concentrations of vancomycinDoroshenko, NatalyaStoodley, Paul2014Staphylococcus epidermidis biofilm formation is a primary cause of medical device infections, which are persistent and difficult to eradicate because biofilms intrinsically exhibit a naturally high level of antibiotic resistance. Although biofilm antibiotic resistance or tolerance is a multifactorial process, some mechanisms such as limited diffusion, low metabolic activity and persister cells, contribute to the failure of antibiotics in the treatment of biofilm infections. Current, antibiotic treatment strategies may provide biofilm infections with intermittent exposure to sub-minimum inhibitory concentrations (sub-MIC) of antibiotics. Biofilms have been shown to display an increase in antibiotic tolerance when exposed to antibiotics at sub-MIC. Such mechanisms of adaptive antibiotic resistance are not well characterized but are of extreme clinical importance. This project showed that exposure to sub-MIC vancomycin increases the virulence of S. epidermidis biofilms because it induces vancomycin tolerance. BODIPY FL-vancomycin (fluorescent vancomycin conjugate) and confocal microscopy were used to show that the penetration of vancomycin through sub-MIC vancomycin pre-treated S. epidermidis biofilms was impeded, when compared to control, untreated biofilms. In addition, the results showed that a wide range of sub-MIC vancomycin concentrations induced an increased amount of extracellular DNA (eDNA) within the matrix of sub-MIC vancomycin treated biofilms. Finally, a set of ex vivo experiments using extracted exogenous S. epidermidis DNA revealed that exogenous S. epidermidis DNA binds vancomycin. Collectively these findings suggest that sub-MIC vancomycin exposure increase the abundance of eDNA in the matrix of S. epidermidis biofilms, which protects the biofilm community from subsequent vancomycin exposure by binding vancomycin as it travels through the matrix. Therefore the work in this project provides details of an eDNA-based mechanism of adaptive antibiotic tolerance in sub-MIC vancomycin treated S. epidermidis biofilms, which might be an important factor in the persistence of biofilms infections.615.7RS Pharmacy and materia medicaUniversity of Southamptonhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.628711https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/366538/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 615.7
RS Pharmacy and materia medica
spellingShingle 615.7
RS Pharmacy and materia medica
Doroshenko, Natalya
The biofilm matrix at sub-inhibitory concentrations of vancomycin
description Staphylococcus epidermidis biofilm formation is a primary cause of medical device infections, which are persistent and difficult to eradicate because biofilms intrinsically exhibit a naturally high level of antibiotic resistance. Although biofilm antibiotic resistance or tolerance is a multifactorial process, some mechanisms such as limited diffusion, low metabolic activity and persister cells, contribute to the failure of antibiotics in the treatment of biofilm infections. Current, antibiotic treatment strategies may provide biofilm infections with intermittent exposure to sub-minimum inhibitory concentrations (sub-MIC) of antibiotics. Biofilms have been shown to display an increase in antibiotic tolerance when exposed to antibiotics at sub-MIC. Such mechanisms of adaptive antibiotic resistance are not well characterized but are of extreme clinical importance. This project showed that exposure to sub-MIC vancomycin increases the virulence of S. epidermidis biofilms because it induces vancomycin tolerance. BODIPY FL-vancomycin (fluorescent vancomycin conjugate) and confocal microscopy were used to show that the penetration of vancomycin through sub-MIC vancomycin pre-treated S. epidermidis biofilms was impeded, when compared to control, untreated biofilms. In addition, the results showed that a wide range of sub-MIC vancomycin concentrations induced an increased amount of extracellular DNA (eDNA) within the matrix of sub-MIC vancomycin treated biofilms. Finally, a set of ex vivo experiments using extracted exogenous S. epidermidis DNA revealed that exogenous S. epidermidis DNA binds vancomycin. Collectively these findings suggest that sub-MIC vancomycin exposure increase the abundance of eDNA in the matrix of S. epidermidis biofilms, which protects the biofilm community from subsequent vancomycin exposure by binding vancomycin as it travels through the matrix. Therefore the work in this project provides details of an eDNA-based mechanism of adaptive antibiotic tolerance in sub-MIC vancomycin treated S. epidermidis biofilms, which might be an important factor in the persistence of biofilms infections.
author2 Stoodley, Paul
author_facet Stoodley, Paul
Doroshenko, Natalya
author Doroshenko, Natalya
author_sort Doroshenko, Natalya
title The biofilm matrix at sub-inhibitory concentrations of vancomycin
title_short The biofilm matrix at sub-inhibitory concentrations of vancomycin
title_full The biofilm matrix at sub-inhibitory concentrations of vancomycin
title_fullStr The biofilm matrix at sub-inhibitory concentrations of vancomycin
title_full_unstemmed The biofilm matrix at sub-inhibitory concentrations of vancomycin
title_sort biofilm matrix at sub-inhibitory concentrations of vancomycin
publisher University of Southampton
publishDate 2014
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.628711
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