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New Evidence and Insights on Dalbavancin and Wound Healing in a Mouse Model of Skin Infection

Oriana Simonetti, Guendalina Lucarini, Gianluca Morroni, Fiorenza Orlando, Raffaella Lazzarini, Antonio Zizzi, Lucia Brescini, Mauro Provinciali, Andrea Giacometti, Annamaria Offidani, Oscar Cirioni

2020Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

(MRSA) skin infection was established. Mice were treated daily with vancomycin (10 mg/kg) and weekly with dalbavancin at day 1 (20 mg/kg) and day 8 (10 mg/kg). After 14 days, wounds were excised, and bacterial counts were performed. Wound healing was assessed by histological and immunohistochemical staining, followed by protein extraction and immunoblotting. Our microbiological results confirmed that both dalbavancin and vancomycin are effective in reducing the bacterial load in wounds. The dalbavancin group showed a strong effect compared with infected untreated animals and the vancomycin-treated group. The wounds treated with dalbavancin showed robust epidermal coverage with reconstitution of the regular and keratinized epidermal lining and well-organized granulation tissue with numerous blood vessels, although slightly less than that in the uninfected group. While in the vancomycin-treated group the epithelium appeared, in general, still hypertrophic, the granulation tissue appeared even less organized. We observed elevated EGFR and VEGF expression in both treated groups, although it was higher in dalbavancin-treated mice. MMP-1 and MMP-9 were decreased in uninfected tissue and in both treated tissues compared with untreated infected wounds. This study showed faster healing with dalbavancin treatment that might be associated with higher EGFR and VEGF levels.

Topics & Concepts

DalbavancinVancomycinWound healingStaphylococcus aureusMedicineMatrix metalloproteinaseAntibioticsVascular endothelial growth factorMicrobiologySkin infectionPharmacologyImmunologyBiologyVEGF receptorsCancer researchInternal medicineBacteriaGeneticsWound Healing and TreatmentsAntimicrobial Peptides and ActivitiesAntimicrobial Resistance in Staphylococcus