Physicochemical mechanisms of bacterial response in the photodynamic potentiation of antibiotic effects.

Sci Rep

São Carlos Institute of Physics, University of São Paulo, Av. Trabalhador São-Carlense, 400, 13566-590, São Carlos, São Paulo, Brazil.

Published: December 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Antibiotic resistance poses a serious global health issue, prompting research into methods to make bacteria more susceptible to existing antibiotics.
  • This study investigates the use of photodynamic inactivation with curcumin and its effects when combined with antibiotics like amoxicillin, erythromycin, and gentamicin, utilizing advanced imaging techniques to analyze interactions.
  • Findings indicate that this combined approach can significantly enhance antibiotic effectiveness, showing up to 32-fold reductions in resistance and marking a potential strategy to combat multidrug-resistant bacterial infections.

Article Abstract

Antibiotic failures in treatments of bacterial infections from resistant strains have been a global health concern, mainly due to the proportions they can reach in the coming years. Making microorganisms susceptible to existing antibiotics is an alternative to solve this problem. This study applies a physicochemical method to the standard treatment for modulating the synergistic response towards circumventing the mechanisms of bacterial resistance. Photodynamic inactivation protocols (curcumina 10 µM, 10 J/cm) and their cellular behavior in the presence of amoxicillin, erythromycin, and gentamicin antibiotics were analyzed from the dynamics of bacterial interaction of a molecule that produces only toxic effects after the absorption of a specific wavelength of light. In addition to bacterial viability, the interaction of curcumin, antibiotics and bacteria were imaged and chemically analyzed using confocal fluorescence microscopy and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). The interaction between therapies depended on the sequential order of application, metabolic activity, and binding of bacterial cell surface biomolecules. The results demonstrated a potentiating effect of the antibiotic with up to to 32-fold reduction in minimum inhibitory concentrations and mean reductions of 7 log CFU/ml by physicochemical action at bacterial level after the photodynamic treatment. The changes observed as a result of bacteria-antibiotic interactions, such as membrane permeabilization and increase in susceptibility, may be a possibility for solving the problem of microbial multidrug resistance.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9729225PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-25546-yDOI Listing

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