Vancomycin-Polyguanidino Dendrimer Conjugates Inhibit Growth of Antibiotic-Resistant Gram-Positive and Gram-Negative Bacteria and Eradicate Biofilm-Associated S. aureus .
Madeline B ChosyJiuzhi SunHarrison P RahnXinyu LiuJasna BrčićPaul A WenderLynette CegelskiPublished in: ACS infectious diseases (2024)
The global challenge of antibiotic resistance necessitates the introduction of more effective antibiotics. Here we report a potentially general design strategy, exemplified with vancomycin, that improves and expands antibiotic performance. Vancomycin is one of the most important antibiotics in use today for the treatment of Gram-positive infections. However, it fails to eradicate difficult-to-treat biofilm populations. Vancomycin is also ineffective in killing Gram-negative bacteria due to its inability to breach the outer membrane. Inspired by our seminal studies on cell penetrating guanidinium-rich transporters (e.g., octaarginine), we recently introduced vancomycin conjugates that effectively eradicate Gram-positive biofilm bacteria, persister cells and vancomycin-resistant enterococci (with V-r8, vancomycin-octaarginine), and Gram-negative pathogens (with V-R, vancomycin-arginine). Having shown previously that the spatial array (linear versus dendrimeric) of multiple guanidinium groups affects cell permeation, we report here for the first time vancomycin conjugates with dendrimerically displayed guanidinium groups that exhibit superior efficacy and breadth, presenting the best activity of V-r8 and V-R in single broad-spectrum compounds active against ESKAPE pathogens. Mode-of-action studies reveal cell-surface activity and enhanced vancomycin-like killing. The vancomycin-polyguanidino dendrimer conjugates exhibit no acute mammalian cell toxicity or hemolytic activity. Our study introduces a new class of broad-spectrum vancomycin derivatives and a general strategy to improve or expand antibiotic performance through combined mode-of-action and function-oriented design studies.
Keyphrases
- methicillin resistant staphylococcus aureus
- gram negative
- staphylococcus aureus
- multidrug resistant
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- single cell
- cell therapy
- stem cells
- nitric oxide
- drug delivery
- genome wide
- cell surface
- dna methylation
- mass spectrometry
- cystic fibrosis
- signaling pathway
- antimicrobial resistance
- mesenchymal stem cells
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- combination therapy
- case control
- high density
- neural network