Anaerobic bacteria growth in the presence of cathelicidin LL-37 and selected ceragenins delivered as magnetic nanoparticles cargo.
Durnaś. Bonita B; Piktel. Ewelina E; Wątek. Marzena M; Wollny. Tomasz T; Góźdź. Stanisław S; Smok-Kalwat. Jolanta J; Niemirowicz. Katarzyna K; Savage. Paul B PB; Bucki. Robert R
Key Findings
- Ceragenins CSA‑13 and CSA‑131 killed anaerobic bacteria more strongly than LL‑37 or metronidazole in vitro
- CSA‑131 prevented biofilm formation by Bacteroides fragilis and Propionibacterium acnes
- Linking ceragenins to magnetic nanoparticles retained their antibacterial activity
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this suggests synthetic ceragenins could become powerful antimicrobial tools, but they are still early‑stage lab findings. No human dosage or safety data exist yet, so they’re not ready for personal use, though the results may guide future DIY topical or gut‑health experiments once more research is done.
Summary
Researchers tested natural peptide LL‑37 and synthetic mimics called ceragenins (CSA‑13 and CSA‑131) against harmful anaerobic bacteria. The lab results showed the ceragenins killed the bugs more effectively than LL‑37 or the antibiotic metronidazole, and CSA‑131 also stopped biofilm formation. They even attached these compounds to magnetic nanoparticles and kept the antibacterial effect.
Abstract
Cationic antibacterial peptides (CAPs) and synthetic molecules mimicking the amphiphilic structure of CAPs, such as ceragenins, are promising compounds for the development of new antimicrobials. We tested the in vitro activity of ceragenins CSA-13 and CSA-131 against several anaerobic bacteria including Bacteroides spp. and Clostridium difficile. We compared results to the activity of cathelicidin LL-37, metronidazole and nanosystems developed by attachment of CSA-13 and CSA-131 to magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs). The antibacterial effect was tested using killing assay and modified CLSI broth microdilution assay. Ceragenins CSA-13 and CSA-131 displayed stronger bactericidal activity than LL-37 or metronidazole against all of the tested bacterial strains. Additionally CSA-131 revealed an enhanced ability to prevent the formation of Bacteroides fragilis and Propionibacterium acnes biofilms. These data confirmed that ceragenins display antimicrobial activity against a broad range of microorganisms including anaerobic bacteria and deserve further investigations as compounds serving to develop new treatment against anaerobic and mixed infections.
Study Information
pubmed
2017
2017-07-26T00:00:00.000Z
10.1186/s12866-017-1075-6
31
46