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Reducing the virulence of Pseudomonas aeruginosa by using multiple quorum quenching enzymes.

Mst Afroza KhatunMd Anarul HoqueMattheos KoffasFan Jiang
Published in: Journal of industrial microbiology & biotechnology (2023)
The emergence of multidrug-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa in healthcare settings poses a tremendous challenge to traditional antibiotic therapy. P. aeruginosa utilizes quorum sensing (QS) to coordinate the production of virulence factors and the formation of drug-resistant biofilms. QS is mediated by signal compounds produced by P. aeruginosa as well as signal molecules produced by other non-pseudomonad bacteria. A potential strategy to prevent bacterial pathogenicity is utilizing enzymes to interfere with QS. Here, we used AidC, a quorum-quenching enzyme from Chryseobacterium sp. strain StRB126 that can effectively hydrolyze N-(3-oxododecanoyl) homoserine lactone (3OC12-HSL) and N-butanoyl-homoserine lactone (C4-HSL), the major signal molecules synthesized by P. aeruginosa. The exogenous addition of AidC to P. aeruginosa wild-type strain PAO1 cultures significantly reduced the total protease and elastase activities and the production of pyocyanin. In addition, the application of AidC resulted in thin and sparse biofilm formation. Later, we used a metagenomic-derived quorum quenching (QQ) enzyme QQ-2 in combination with AidC to attenuate PAO1 virulence when the presence of a non-pseudomonad signal compound AI-2 aggravated it. These findings suggest that using a combined antimicrobial approach may lead to a more efficacious therapeutic intervention against P. aeruginosa PAO1 infection, as its behavior is modulated in the presence of intraspecies and interspecies signal compounds.
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