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The cathelicidin-derived close-to-nature peptide D-11 sensitises Klebsiella pneumoniae to a range of antibiotics in vitro, ex vivo and in vivo

Rubén Cebrián, Congjuan Xu, Yushan Xia, Weihui Wu, Oscar P. Kuipers

2021International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria constitutes a permeability barrier that prevents certain antibiotics reaching their target, thus conferring a high tolerance to a wide range of antibiotics. Combined therapies of antibiotics and outer membrane-perturbing drugs have been proposed as an alternative treatment to extend the use of antibiotics active against Gram-positive bacteria to Gram-negative bacteria. Among the outer membrane-active compounds, the outer membrane-permeabilising peptides play a prominent role. They form a group of small cationic and amphipathic molecules with the ability to insert specifically into bacterial membranes, inducing their permeabilisation and/or disruption. Here we assessed the combined effect of several compounds belonging to the main antibiotic families and the cathelicidin close-to-nature outer membrane peptide D-11 against four clinically relevant Gram-negative bacteria. The results showed that peptide D-11 displays strong synergistic activity with several antibiotics belonging to different families, in particular against Klebsiella pneumoniae, even better than some other outer membrane-active peptides that are currently in clinical trials, such as SPR741. Notably, we observed this activity in vitro, ex vivo in a newly designed bacteraemia model, and in vivo in a mouse abscess infection model. Overall, our results suggest that D-11 is a good candidate to repurpose the activity of traditional antibiotics against K. pneumoniae.

Topics & Concepts

CathelicidinBacterial outer membraneAntibioticsKlebsiella pneumoniaeIn vivoMicrobiologyEx vivoBacteriaPeptideBiologyGram-negative bacteriaAntimicrobial peptidesAntimicrobialBiochemistryEscherichia coliGeneticsBiotechnologyGeneAntimicrobial Peptides and ActivitiesAntibiotic Resistance in BacteriaBiochemical and Structural Characterization
The cathelicidin-derived close-to-nature peptide D-11 sensitises Klebsiella pneumoniae to a range of antibiotics in vitro, ex vivo and in vivo | Litcius