The effects of antimicrobial peptides WAM-1 and LL-37 on multidrug-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii.
Spencer. John J JJ; Pitts. Rowan E RE; Pearson. Rachel A RA; King. Lauren B LB
Key Findings
- WAM‑1 kills MDR A. baumannii faster and more strongly than human LL‑37
- Both peptides stop the bacteria from forming biofilms, and WAM‑1 can also break down existing biofilms
- When used together with common antibiotics, WAM‑1 shows synergistic killing of the bacteria
Practical Outcomes
- Right now the findings are mostly of scientific interest; they suggest that future topical or inhaled peptide therapies could help fight hard‑to‑treat infections, but biohackers should wait for safety and dosing data before trying to use these peptides themselves.
Summary
The study shows that two natural antimicrobial peptides, especially the marsupial peptide WAM‑1, can kill drug‑resistant Acinetobacter bacteria in lab tests and work better when combined with regular antibiotics, but this is still early‑stage research and not a ready‑to‑use treatment for everyday health hacks.
Abstract
Increasing multidrug resistance (MDR) in Acinetobacter baumannii warrants therapeutic alternatives, and the bactericidal nature of antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) offers a possible approach. In this study, we examined the interaction of cathelicidin AMPs WAM-1, a marsupial AMP, and LL-37, a human AMP, with A. baumannii clinical isolates. We characterized the antibiotic resistance of the isolates, the bacteriostatic and bactericidal effects of these AMPs, synergistic activity with antibiotics, and their effects on biofilm formation and dispersal. All clinical isolates were resistant to commonly prescribed antibiotics, with four of seven isolates showing MDR. WAM-1 and LL-37 showed variable activity in clinical isolates, with WAM-1 having a stronger bacteriostatic effect than LL-37 and showing rapid bactericidal activity against clinical isolates. Furthermore, synergistic bactericidal activity was observed with WAM-1 and commonly prescribed antibiotics. Both peptides were able to inhibit biofilm formation in all clinical isolates at some concentrations, and WAM-1 dispersed mature biofilm in most isolates. LL-37 was unable to disperse mature biofilms in any strains. Further studies must be done to elucidate the true value of these alternative treatments, but these results suggest that MDR A. baumannii's susceptibility to AMPs may result in innovative therapeutics to prevent or treat these infections.
Study Information
pubmed
2018
2018-03-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1093/femspd/fty007
25
22