Credit: The University of Hong Kong
Drug-resistant superbugs pose a huge threat to human health. Currently, colistin is regarded as the last-line antimicrobial against extensively drug resistant (XDR) bacterial infections caused by pathogens, such as Salmonella, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Escherichia coli, Shigella and Acinetobacter baumannii. Unfortunately, the efficacy of colistin has been seriously compromised in the regular treatment of lethal bacterial infections, due to the emergence of mobilized colistin resistance gene-1 (mcr-1) first identified in 2015.
To cope with the serious challenge in the post-antibiotic era, scientists try to re-sensitize the resisted antibiotic against pathogens by using combination therapy between antibiotic and antibiotic- resistance breaker (ARB) to overcome antibiotics-resistance, which will open a window to treat these clinical infections caused by multidrug-resistant pathogens.
A research team led by Professor Hongzhe Sun, Chair Professor from the Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, in collaboration with Dr. Pak-Leung Ho, Director of the HKU Carol Yu Center for Infection from the Department of Microbiology, Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine, The University of Hong Kong (HKU), discovered that an ancient antimicrobials drug, i.e., silver nitrate (AgNO3), can re-sensitize colistin against these multidrug resistant superbugs. Silver nitrate has a long antimicrobial history (more than 2,000 years) and is used to be applied in these external bacterial infections, such as skin infection.
The findings on antimicrobial resistance (AMR) are now published in the multidisciplinary science journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The study is an extension of their past studies on antibiotics-resistance. The research team previously discovered an anti-rheumatic agent, auranofin, as a dual-inhibitor to re-sensitize colistin and β-lactam antibiotics, and published their findings in Nature Communications in 2020.
"Considering the well-recorded safety history of silver nitrate as ancient antimicrobial drugs applied in external infection, silver nitrate can work with auranofin to reinforce each another in treating the infections caused by mcr-positive multidrug resistant superbugs, which provides a new hope to overcome antibiotics-resistance crisis in the post-antibiotic era," said Professor Sun.
Background
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) occurs when bacteria mutate or adjust in response to the misuse or overuse of antimicrobial. As a result, antimicrobial cannot kill bacteria or inhibit its growth any more.
AMR has become one of the biggest public health challenges in this era. According to a report from World Health Organization (WHO), by 2021, the number of people worldwide suffering from antibiotics resistance will be 9% more than the previous year. Indeed, it also predicted that the total number of people infected by multidrug resistant superbugs will up to tens of millions by 2050, which may even exceed the number of people suffering from cancer.
Under the special situations of the current pandemic, antimicrobial resistance caused by improper use of antibiotics has a worsening trend. The Hong Kong's Department of Health has pointed out that a study found that up to 71% of COVID-19 patients had received antibiotic treatment, and only 4% of them had bacterial infection.
Colistin, a polymyxin E family antimicrobial, is regarded as the last-line antimicrobial against extensively drug resistant (XDR) gram-negative bacteria infections. Unfortunately, scientists have first identified the emergence of mobilized colistin resistance gene-1 (mcr-1) in 2015, which has seriously compromised in the efficacy of colistin in regular treatment of lethal bacterial infections. Worse still, owing to the rapid evolution rate of mcr, other family members have also been identified, and each has its own sub-types. These plasmid-borne resistances can cross-spread rapidly via horizontal gene transfer between bacterial strains and species, resulting in emergence of multiple drug resistant superbugs. As said by Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of WHO, "As we gather more evidence, we see more clearly and more worryingly how fast we are losing critically important antimicrobial medicines all over the world." Thus, in clinical practice, common infections with these "superbugs" may soon be untreatable, which will severely endanger the public health system and leave patients with virtually no therapeutic options.
Key findings
The research team found that silver (Ag+) including silver nanoparticles can restore colistin efficacy against mcr-positive bacteria. By using X-ray crystallography method (a X-ray to observe the distribution of electron density in crystal), they confirmed that silver inhibited the activity of MCR-1 enzyme via substitution of Zn2+ (a key factor to result in colistin resistance) in the active site as well as forming a tetra-silver cluster in the active-site pocket of MCR-1. The tetra-silver center effectively inhibits the activity of MCR-1 enzyme, leading to the dysfunction of MCR-1.
The study further showed that silver effectively slows down the development of higher-level resistance and reduces mutation frequency. In the mouse-skin infection model, the combination therapy composed of AgNO3 and colistin is also highly effective in relieving the dermonecrotic lesions and reducing the bacterial load. In conclusion, the great combination effect in vitro and in vivo undoubtedly offers a promising strategy to overcome antimicrobial resistance in post-antibiotic era.
More information: Qi Zhang et al, Re-sensitization of mcr carrying multidrug resistant bacteria to colistin by silver, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2022).
Journal information: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences , Nature Communications
Provided by The University of Hong Kong