Subinhibitory Concentrations of Azithromycin Decrease Nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae Biofilm Formation and Diminish Established Biofilms
99
TL;DR: Data show that subinhibitory concentrations of azithromycin have antibiofilm properties, provide mechanistic insights, and supply an additional rationale for the use of azathromycin in chronic biofilm infections involving H. influenzae.
read more
Abstract: Nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHi) commonly causes otitis media, chronic bronchitis in emphysema, and early airway infections in cystic fibrosis. Long-term, low-dose azithromycin has been shown to improve clinical outcomes in chronic lung diseases, although the mechanism of action remains unclear. The inhibition of bacterial biofilms by azithromycin has been postulated to be one mechanism mediating these effects. We hypothesized that subinhibitory concentrations of azithromycin would affect NTHi biofilm formation. Laboratory strains of NTHi expressing green fluorescent protein and azithromycin-resistant clinical isolates were grown in flow-cell and static-culture biofilm models. Using a range of concentrations of azithromycin and gentamicin, we measured the degree to which these antibiotics inhibited biofilm formation and persistence. Large biofilms formed over 2 to 4 days in a flow cell, displaying complex structures, including towers and channels. Subinhibitory concentrations of azithromycin significantly decreased biomass and maximal thickness in both forming and established NTHi biofilms. In contrast, subinhibitory concentrations of gentamicin had no effect on biofilm formation. Furthermore, established NTHi biofilms became resistant to gentamicin at concentrations far above the MIC. Biofilm formation of highly resistant clinical NTHi isolates (azithromycin MIC of > 64 microg/ml) was similarly decreased at subinhibitory azithromycin concentrations. Clinically obtainable azithromycin concentrations inhibited biofilms in all but the most highly resistant isolates. These data show that subinhibitory concentrations of azithromycin have antibiofilm properties, provide mechanistic insights, and supply an additional rationale for the use of azithromycin in chronic biofilm infections involving H. influenzae.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Diffusible signals and interspecies communication in bacteria.
Robert P. Ryan,J. Maxwell Dow +1 more
TL;DR: Current understanding of interspecies signalling in bacteria and the signals involved is reviewed, what is known of the underlying signal transduction mechanisms and their influences on bacterial behaviour are reviewed.
New developments in microbial interspecies signaling.
TL;DR: This review will focus on how bacterial small molecules modulate these interspecies interactions, particularly complex relationships such as those between microbes and insects, interactions resulting in non-antagonistic outcomes (i.e. developmental and morphological processes), and how co-culture can lead to the discovery of new small molecules.
214
Long-Term Azithromycin Reduces Haemophilus influenzae and Increases Antibiotic Resistance in Severe Asthma.
Steven L. Taylor,Lex E. X. Leong,Fredrick M. Mobegi,Jocelyn M. Choo,Steven Lodewyk Wesselingh,Ian A. Yang,John W. Upham,John W. Upham,Paul N. Reynolds,Paul N. Reynolds,Sandra Hodge,Sandra Hodge,Alan James,Alan James,Christine Jenkins,Matthew J. Peters,Melissa Baraket,Melissa Baraket,Guy B. Marks,Guy B. Marks,Guy B. Marks,Peter G. Gibson,Peter G. Gibson,Geraint B. Rogers,Jodie L. Simpson +24 more
TL;DR: In patients with persistent uncontrolled asthma, addition of azithromycin reduced airway H. influenzae load, with no changes to total or pathogenic bacterial loads, and macrolide resistance increased, reflecting previous studies.
156
Use of quorum sensing inhibitors to interfere with biofilm formation and development in Burkholderia multivorans and Burkholderia cenocepacia.
TL;DR: The results suggest that the QS inhibitors affect later stages of biofilm formation and detachment, making Burkholderia infections difficult to treat.
152
Bacterial biofilms in the upper airway - evidence for role in pathology and implications for treatment of otitis media.
TL;DR: Gaining an improved understanding of the unique properties of bacteria resident within a biofilm and the proteins they express while growing as part of this organized community has the potential to identify novel and perhaps biofilm-specific molecular targets for the design of either therapeutic agents or vaccine candidates for the resolution of existing OM.
103
References
Direct Detection of Bacterial Biofilms on the Middle-Ear Mucosa of Children With Chronic Otitis Media
Luanne Hall-Stoodley,Fen Z. Hu,Fen Z. Hu,Armin Gieseke,Armin Gieseke,Laura Nistico,Duc Nguyen,Jay Hayes,Michael L. Forbes,David P. Greenberg,Bethany Dice,Amy Burrows,P. Ashley Wackym,Paul Stoodley,Paul Stoodley,J. Christopher Post,J. Christopher Post,Garth D. Ehrlich,Garth D. Ehrlich,Joseph E. Kerschner +19 more
TL;DR: Direct detection of biofilms on MEM biopsy specimens from children with OME and recurrent OM supports the hypothesis that these chronic middle-ear disorders are biofilm-related.
941
Heavy metal resistance of biofilm and planktonic Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
TL;DR: It was determined that biofilms were anywhere from 2 to 600 times more resistant to heavy metal stress than free-swimming cells, and planktonic cells at different stages of growth were examined, it was found that logarithmically growing cells were moreresistant to copper and lead stress than stationary-phase cells.
735
Long term azithromycin in children with cystic fibrosis: a randomised, placebo-controlled crossover trial
TL;DR: A 4-6-month trial of azithromycin is justified in children with cystic fibrosis who do not respond to conventional treatment and the mechanism of action remains unknown.
564
Effect of long term treatment with azithromycin on disease parameters in cystic fibrosis: A randomised trial
TL;DR: AZM in adults with CF significantly improved QOL, reduced CRP levels and the number of respiratory exacerbations, and reduced the rate of decline in lung function, suggesting long term AZM may have a significant impact on morbidity and mortality in patients with CF.
529
Deaths: final data for 2002.
Kenneth D. Kochanek,Sherry L Murphy,Robert N Anderson,Chester Scott +3 more
- 12 Oct 2004
TL;DR: Generally, mortality patterns in 2002 were consistent with long-term trends, and life expectancy in 2002 increased again to a new record level, and the age-adjusted death rate declined to a record low historical figure.
Related Papers (5)
Luanne Hall-Stoodley,Fen Z. Hu,Fen Z. Hu,Armin Gieseke,Armin Gieseke,Laura Nistico,Duc Nguyen,Jay Hayes,Michael L. Forbes,David P. Greenberg,Bethany Dice,Amy Burrows,P. Ashley Wackym,Paul Stoodley,Paul Stoodley,J. Christopher Post,J. Christopher Post,Garth D. Ehrlich,Garth D. Ehrlich,Joseph E. Kerschner +19 more