Search results for "Bacterial"

showing 10 items of 3246 documents

Branched High Molecular Weight Glycopolypeptide With Broad-Spectrum Antimicrobial Activity for the Treatment of Biofilm Related Infections.

2017

There are few therapeutic options to simultaneously tackle Staphylococcus aureus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, two of the most relevant nosocomial and antibiotic-resistant pathogens responsible for implant, catheters and wound severe infections. The design and synthesis of polymers with inherent antimicrobial activity have gained increasing attention as a safe strategy to treat multi-drug-resistant microbes. Here, we tested the activity of a new polymeric derivative with glycopolypeptide architecture (PAA-VC) bearing l-arginine, vancomycin, and colistin as side chains acting against multiple targets, which give rise to a broad spectrum antimicrobial activity favorably combining specific and n…

Staphylococcus aureusMaterials science02 engineering and technologyMicrobial Sensitivity Tests010402 general chemistrymedicine.disease_cause01 natural sciencesMicrobiologyBroad spectrumAntibiotic resistanceVancomycinmedicineGeneral Materials Sciencecolistinantimicrobial polymerPseudomonas aeruginosasynthetic polypeptideBiofilmbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutrition021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyAntimicrobial0104 chemical sciencesAnti-Bacterial AgentsMolecular WeightStaphylococcus aureusBiofilmsPseudomonas aeruginosaColistinVancomycinStaphylococcus aureus biofilm0210 nano-technologymedicine.drugACS applied materialsinterfaces
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Polyester vascular prostheses coated with a cyclodextrin polymer and activated with antibiotics: Cytotoxicity and microbiological evaluation

2008

Abstract Polyester (PET) vascular grafts are used to replace or bypass damaged arteries. To minimize the risk of infection during and after surgical interventions, a PET vascular prosthesis (Polythese®) was functionalized with cyclodextrin polymers (PolyCDs) in order to obtain the controlled release of antibiotics (ABs: ciprofloxacin, vancomcyin and rifampicin). An epithelial cell line (L132) was used to determine the viability of the antibiotics, and human pulmonary microvascular endothelial cells (HPMEC) were used for cell proliferation by cell counting and cell vitality with Alamar Blue fluorescent dye. Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli and Enteroccocus sp. were used to determine t…

Staphylococcus aureusMaterials scienceCell Survivalmedicine.drug_classPolyestersAntibioticsBiomedical EngineeringMicrobial Sensitivity TestsProsthesis DesignBiochemistryMicrobiologyBiomaterialsMinimum inhibitory concentrationCiprofloxacinVancomycinIn vivoEscherichia colimedicineHumansCelluloseCytotoxicityMolecular BiologyCyclodextrinsGeneral MedicineAntimicrobialAnti-Bacterial AgentsBlood Vessel ProsthesisCiprofloxacinSpectrophotometryToxicityVancomycinRifampinEnterococcusBiotechnologymedicine.drugActa Biomaterialia
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Effect of temperature on the release of carvacrol and cinnamaldehyde incorporated into polymeric systems to control growth and biofilms ofEscherichia…

2015

This study assessed the effect of temperature on the release of essential oil components incorporated by melt compounding into polymeric films. Specifically, polyethylene-co-vinylacetate (EVA) films containing carvacrol (CAR) and cinnamaldehyde (ALD), alone and in combination, were prepared and their surface and mechanical properties and antibacterial and anti-biofilm activity against Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus were evaluated. The addition of ALD and CAR did not provoke variation in the surface morphology of EVA and allowed their delivery. At 37°C, films containing CAR, ALD or their combination (25+75%) were found to have the strongest bactericidal effect, whereas at lower t…

Staphylococcus aureusMorphology (linguistics)Aquatic Sciencemedicine.disease_causeApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologybiofilmCinnamaldehydelaw.inventionchemistry.chemical_compoundlawOils VolatileEscherichia colimedicineOrganic chemistryCarvacrolAcroleinEscherichia coliEssential oilWater Science and TechnologyAcroleinBiofilmtemperatureAnti-Bacterial Agentsantibacterial polymerchemistryStaphylococcus aureusBiofilmsMonoterpenesStaphylococcus aureuCymenesPolyvinylsPolyethylenestemperature; antibacterial polymers; biofilm; essential oil components; Escherichia coli; Staphylococcus aureusessential oil componentNuclear chemistryBiofouling
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Antimicrobial Defense and Persistent Infection in Insects

2008

During 400 million years of existence, insects have rarely succumbed to the evolution of microbial resistance against their potent antimicrobial immune defenses. We found that microbial clearance after infection is extremely fast and that induced antimicrobial activity starts to increase only when most of the bacteria (99.5%) have been removed. Our experiments showed that those bacteria that survived exposure to the insect's constitutive immune response were subsequently more resistant to it. These results imply that induced antimicrobial compounds function primarily to protect the insect against the bacteria that persist within their body, rather than to clear microbial infections. These f…

Staphylococcus aureusMultidisciplinaryAntimicrobial peptidesDrug resistanceBiologybiology.organism_classificationAntimicrobialmedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyImmune systemAntibiotic resistanceStaphylococcus aureusHemolymphmedicineAnimalsFemaleTenebrioBacteriaAntibacterial agentScience
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Towards Laser-Textured Antibacterial Surfaces

2018

AbstractEscherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus bacterial retention on mirror-polished and ultrashort pulse laser-textured surfaces is quantified with a new approach based on ISO standards for measurement of antibacterial performance. It is shown that both wettability and surface morphology influence antibacterial behavior, with neither superhydrophobicity nor low surface roughness alone sufficient for reducing initial retention of either tested cell type. Surface structures comprising spikes, laser-induced periodic surface structures (LIPSS) and nano-pillars are produced with 1030 nm wavelength 350 fs laser pulses of energy 19.1 μJ, 1.01 μJ and 1.46 μJ, respectively. SEM analysis, optic…

Staphylococcus aureusNanostructureMaterials scienceShear forcelcsh:Medicine02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesArticleBacterial AdhesionContact angleMicroscopyEscherichia coliSurface roughnessLotus effectComposite materiallcsh:ScienceAsepsisMultidisciplinaryLaserslcsh:R021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology0104 chemical sciencesSteelWettabilitylcsh:QWetting0210 nano-technologyUltrashort pulseScientific Reports
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Lipid and phase specificity of α-toxin from S. aureus

2013

AbstractThe pore forming toxin Hla (α-toxin) from Staphylococcus aureus is an important pathogenic factor of the bacterium S. aureus and also a model system for the process of membrane-induced protein oligomerisation and pore formation. It has been shown that binding to lipid membranes at neutral or basic pH requires the presence of a phosphocholine-headgroup. Thus, sphingomyelin and phosphatidylcholine may serve as interaction partners in cellular membranes. Based on earlier studies it has been suggested that rafts of sphingomyelin are particularly efficient in toxin binding. In this study we compared the oligomerisation of Hla on liposomes of various lipid compositions in order to identif…

Staphylococcus aureusPore formationLiquid ordered phaseBacterial ToxinsLipid BilayersBiophysicsBiologyBiochemistryPhase Transitionchemistry.chemical_compoundHemolysin ProteinsMembrane LipidsMembrane MicrodomainsPhosphatidylcholineBinding siteLipid raftUnilamellar LiposomesPore-forming toxinLiposomeArtificial membranesBinding SitesCell MembraneOligomerisationCell BiologyS. aureusSphingomyelinsMembraneBiochemistrychemistryMicroscopy FluorescenceMutationPhosphatidylcholineslipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)Protein MultimerizationToxinSphingomyelinBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Biomembranes
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Novel pathogenic mechanism of microbial metalloproteinases: liberation of membrane-anchored molecules in biologically active form exemplified by stud…

1996

Certain membrane-anchored proteins, including several cytokines and cytokine receptors, can be released into cell supernatants through the action of endogenous membrane-bound metalloproteinases. The shed molecules are then able to fulfill various biological functions; for example, soluble interleukin-6 receptor (sIL-6R) can bind to bystander cells, rendering these cells sensitive to the action of IL-6. Using IL-6R as a model substrate, we report that the metalloproteinase from Serratia marcescens mimics the action of the endogenous shedding proteinase. Treatment of human monocytes with the bacterial protease led to a rapid release of sIL-6R into the supernatant. This effect was inhibitable …

Staphylococcus aureusProteasesmedicine.medical_treatmentImmunologyBiologyMatrix metalloproteinaseMicrobiologyMonocytesSubstrate SpecificityAntigens CDChlorocebus aethiopsmedicineAnimalsHumansReceptorSerratia marcescensMetalloproteinaseProteaseMembrane ProteinsMetalloendopeptidasesBiological activityBacterial InfectionsReceptors InterleukinListeria monocytogenesReceptors Interleukin-6Recombinant ProteinsBlotInfectious DiseasesSolubilityBiochemistryPseudomonas aeruginosaParasitologySignal transductionResearch ArticleSignal TransductionInfection and Immunity
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Staphylococcal alpha-toxin: formation of the heptameric pore is partially cooperative and proceeds through multiple intermediate stages.

1997

Staphylococcal alpha-toxin is a 293 residue polypeptide that assembles into pore-forming heptamers, residues 118-140, thereby inserting to form an amphipathic beta-barrel in the lipid bilayer. Fluorometric analyses were here conducted using cysteine-substitution mutants site-specifically-labeled at positions 35 or 130 with the environmentally-sensitive fluorophore acrylodan. In conjunction with functional assays, three conformational states of the heptamer were defined, which may represent transitional configurations of the toxin molecule along its way to membrane insertion and pore formation. The first was the freshly assembled, SDS-sensitive heptamer alpha7*a, where a minor alteration in …

Staphylococcus aureusProtein ConformationMutantBacterial ToxinsLipid BilayersExotoxinsSequence (biology)ProtomerBiochemistryResidue (chemistry)Hemolysin ProteinsProtein structureBacterial Proteins2-NaphthylamineAmphiphileAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceLipid bilayerFluorescent DyesChemistryErythrocyte MembraneMembraneSpectrometry FluorescenceBiophysicsMutagenesis Site-DirectedRabbitsBiochemistry
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The chemical composition of the aerial parts of Stachys spreitzenhoferi (Lamiaceae) growing in Kythira Island (Greece), and their antioxidant, antimi…

2022

The Stachys L. genus has been used in traditional medicine to treat skin inflammations, stomach disorders, and stress. The aim of this study was to investigate the chemical profile and biological activity of the methanolic extract of Stachys spreitzenhoferi Heldr. (Lamiaceae) aerial parts, collected on the island of Kythira, South Greece. The analysis by liquid chromatography coupled with electrospray ionization and high-resolution mass spectrometry [LC-(-)ESI/HRMSn] of the methanol extract revealed the occurrence of thirty-six compounds - flavonoids, phenylethanoid glycosides, iridoids, quinic acid derivatives, aliphatic alcohol glycosides, and oligosaccharides - highlighting the substanti…

Staphylococcus aureusQuinic AcidPlant ScienceAntiproliferative activityHorticultureAntimicrobial activityBiochemistryAntioxidantsAntimicrobial activity; Antioxidant effects; Antiproliferative activity; LC-(−)ESI/HRMS(n); Lamiaceae; Stachys spreitzenhoferi Heldr.; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Antioxidants; Flavonoids; Glycosides; Greece; Humans; Iridoids; Methanol; Plant Components Aerial; Plant Extracts; Quinic Acid; Reactive Oxygen Species; Staphylococcus aureus; Superoxide Dismutase; U937 Cells; Anti-Infective Agents; Lamiaceae; StachysAnti-Infective AgentsHumansIridoidsStachys spreitzenhoferi HeldrGlycosidesMolecular BiologyFlavonoidsLamiaceaeGreecePlant ExtractsSuperoxide DismutaseMethanolStachys spreitzenhoferi Heldr.LC-(−)ESI/HRMS(n)AerialGeneral MedicineU937 CellsAntioxidant effectPlant Components AerialAnti-Bacterial AgentsAntioxidant effectsStachysPlant ComponentsReactive Oxygen Species
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Pyrrolomycins as potential anti-staphylococcal biofilms agents

2010

With the goal of discovering new anti-infective agents active against microbial biofilms, this investigation focused on some natural pyrrolomycins, a family of halogenated pyrrole antibiotics. In this study the anti-staphylococcal biofilm activity of pyrrolomycins C, D, F1, F2a, F2b, F3 and of the synthesized related compounds I, II, III were investigated. The susceptibility of six staphylococcal biofilms was determined by methyltiazotetrazolium staining. Most of the compounds were active at concentrations of 1.5 microg ml(-1) with significant inhibition percentages. A few of the compounds were active at the lowest screening concentration of 0.045 microg ml(-1). The population log reduction…

Staphylococcus aureusSynthetic derivativesmedicine.drug_classCell SurvivalAntibioticsPopulationMicrobial Sensitivity TestsAquatic ScienceBiologymedicine.disease_causeSettore BIO/19 - Microbiologia GeneraleApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyPolymerase Chain ReactionBacterial AdhesionMicrobiologyCell LineInhibitory Concentration 50medicineStaphylococcus epidermidisHumansPyrroleseducationWater Science and TechnologyMicrobial BiofilmsCell Proliferationeducation.field_of_studyMolecular StructureBiofilmStainingAnti-Bacterial AgentsStaphylococcal biofilms Anti-biofilm agents PyrrolomycinsStaphylococcus aureusBiofilmsToxicity
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