The obligate intracellular bacterium is a widespread human pathogen that causes serious problems, including (but not limited to) infertility and blindness. Our search for novel antichlamydial metabolites from marine-derived microorganisms led to the isolation of pyocyanin, a small compound from Pyocyanin is an effective antichlamydial for all three spp. tested. It has a 50% inhibitory concentration (IC) of 0.019 to 0.028 μM, which is comparable to the IC of tetracycline. At concentrations as low as 0.0039 μM, pyocyanin disables infectivity of the chlamydial elementary body (EB). At 0.5 μM or higher concentrations, the continuous presence of pyocyanin also inhibits chlamydial growth in the inclusion during later stages of the developmental cycle. Oxidative stress, a major known antimicrobial mechanism of pyocyanin, appears to be responsible only for the inhibition of bacterial growth and not for the disinfection of EBs. Pyocyanin is well-tolerated by probiotic vaginal spp. Our findings suggest that pyocyanin is of therapeutic value for chlamydial infections and can serve as a valuable chemical probe for studying chlamydial biology.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5971585PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AAC.02260-17DOI Listing

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