Synergistic effects of LFchimera and antibiotic against planktonic and biofilm form of Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans.
Lachica. Marie Rossini Carmela T MRCT; Anutrakunchai. Chitchanok C; Prajaneh. Saengsome S; Nazmi. Kamran K; Bolscher. Jan G M JGM; Taweechaisupapong. Suwimol S
Key Findings
- LFchimera showed the strongest antibacterial activity among the tested peptides.
- Low concentrations of doxycycline (1‑5 µM) did not kill the bacteria and sometimes promoted growth.
- Combining doxycycline with LFchimera produced synergistic killing and markedly reduced biofilm formation.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers interested in oral health, LFchimera looks promising as a topical or adjunctive agent to fight gum‑disease bacteria, especially when used with doxycycline. However, the research is still in vitro, so real‑world dosing, safety, and delivery methods need further study before self‑application.
Summary
The study tested a special protein fragment called LFchimera, alone and together with the antibiotic doxycycline, against a gum‑disease bacterium. Alone, LFchimera killed the bacteria well, while low‑dose doxycycline didn’t work and even helped the bugs grow. When mixed, the two worked together (synergy) and dramatically cut down bacterial sticking and biofilm formation on surfaces. This suggests LFchimera could become a new gum‑health aid, especially when paired with doxycycline.
Abstract
Adjunctive use of antibiotics in periodontal treatment have limitations and disadvantages including bacterial resistance. Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are potential new agents that can combat bacterial infection. In this study, antimicrobial activity of different concentrations of conventional antibiotics minocycline (MH), doxycycline (DOX), and antimicrobial peptides LL-37, LL-31, Lactoferrin chimera (LFchimera) and Innate Defense Regulator Peptide 1018 (IDR-1018) against Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans ATCC 43718 were determined using colony culturing assay. Subsequently, in vitro activity of the most effective drug and peptide combination was evaluated by checkerboard technique. Impact of the drug and peptide co-administration on biofilm at different stages, i.e., during adhesion and 1-day old biofilm was compared to each of the agents used alone. Results revealed that the killing effects of all AMPs range from 13-100%. In contrast, MH and DOX at 1 and 5 μM showed no killing activity and instead stimulated growth of bacteria. DOX has better killing activity than MH. LFchimera displayed the strongest killing amongst the peptides. Checkerboard technique revealed that combining DOX and LFchimera yielded synergism. Confocal laser scanning microscopy further showed that the combination of DOX and LFchimera caused significant reduction of bacterial adhesion and reduction of biomass, average biofilm thickness and substratum biofilm coverage of 1-day old biofilm compared to DOX and LFchimera alone. In conclusion, LFchimera alone and in combination with DOX exhibited strong antibacterial and anti-biofilm property against A. actinomycetemcomitans. The findings suggest that LFchimera should be considered for development as a new potential therapeutic agent that may be used as an adjunctive treatment for periodontitis.
Study Information
pubmed
2019
2019-07-22T00:00:00.000Z
10.1371/journal.pone.0217205
8
48