Treatment of Oral Multispecies Biofilms by an Anti-Biofilm Peptide.

Human oral biofilms are multispecies microbial communities that exhibit high resistance to antimicrobial agents. Dental plaque gives rise to highly prevalent and costly biofilm-related oral infections, which lead to caries or other types of oral infections. We investigated the ability of the recentl...

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Main Authors: Zhejun Wang, Cesar de la Fuente-Núñez, Ya Shen, Markus Haapasalo, Robert E W Hancock
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4500547?pdf=render
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author Zhejun Wang
Cesar de la Fuente-Núñez
Ya Shen
Markus Haapasalo
Robert E W Hancock
author_facet Zhejun Wang
Cesar de la Fuente-Núñez
Ya Shen
Markus Haapasalo
Robert E W Hancock
author_sort Zhejun Wang
collection DOAJ
description Human oral biofilms are multispecies microbial communities that exhibit high resistance to antimicrobial agents. Dental plaque gives rise to highly prevalent and costly biofilm-related oral infections, which lead to caries or other types of oral infections. We investigated the ability of the recently identified anti-biofilm peptide 1018 to induce killing of bacterial cells present within oral multispecies biofilms. At 10 μg/ml (6.5 μM), peptide 1018 was able to significantly (p<0.05) prevent biofilm formation over 3 days. The activity of the peptide on preformed biofilms was found to be concentration-dependent since more than 60% of the total plaque biofilm cell population was killed by 10 μg/ml of peptide 1018 in 3 days, while at 5 μg/ml 50% of cells were dead and at 1 μg/ml the peptide triggered cell death in around 30% of the total bacterial population, as revealed by confocal microscopy. The presence of saliva did not affect peptide activity, since no statistically significant difference was found in the ability of peptide 1018 to kill oral biofilms using either saliva coated and non-saliva coated hydroxyapatite surfaces. Scanning electron microscopy experiments indicated that peptide 1018 induced cell lysis in plaque biofilms. Furthermore, combined treatment using peptide 1018 and chlorhexidine (CHX) increased the anti-biofilm activity of each compound compared to when these were used alone, resulting in >50% of the biofilm being killed and >35% being dispersed in only 3 minutes. Peptide 1018 may potentially be used by itself or in combination with CHX as a non-toxic and effective anti-biofilm agent for plaque disinfection in clinical dentistry.
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spelling doaj.art-04fe682b1d7f416c8416e49a6b1d40132022-12-21T18:47:36ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01107e013251210.1371/journal.pone.0132512Treatment of Oral Multispecies Biofilms by an Anti-Biofilm Peptide.Zhejun WangCesar de la Fuente-NúñezYa ShenMarkus HaapasaloRobert E W HancockHuman oral biofilms are multispecies microbial communities that exhibit high resistance to antimicrobial agents. Dental plaque gives rise to highly prevalent and costly biofilm-related oral infections, which lead to caries or other types of oral infections. We investigated the ability of the recently identified anti-biofilm peptide 1018 to induce killing of bacterial cells present within oral multispecies biofilms. At 10 μg/ml (6.5 μM), peptide 1018 was able to significantly (p<0.05) prevent biofilm formation over 3 days. The activity of the peptide on preformed biofilms was found to be concentration-dependent since more than 60% of the total plaque biofilm cell population was killed by 10 μg/ml of peptide 1018 in 3 days, while at 5 μg/ml 50% of cells were dead and at 1 μg/ml the peptide triggered cell death in around 30% of the total bacterial population, as revealed by confocal microscopy. The presence of saliva did not affect peptide activity, since no statistically significant difference was found in the ability of peptide 1018 to kill oral biofilms using either saliva coated and non-saliva coated hydroxyapatite surfaces. Scanning electron microscopy experiments indicated that peptide 1018 induced cell lysis in plaque biofilms. Furthermore, combined treatment using peptide 1018 and chlorhexidine (CHX) increased the anti-biofilm activity of each compound compared to when these were used alone, resulting in >50% of the biofilm being killed and >35% being dispersed in only 3 minutes. Peptide 1018 may potentially be used by itself or in combination with CHX as a non-toxic and effective anti-biofilm agent for plaque disinfection in clinical dentistry.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4500547?pdf=render
spellingShingle Zhejun Wang
Cesar de la Fuente-Núñez
Ya Shen
Markus Haapasalo
Robert E W Hancock
Treatment of Oral Multispecies Biofilms by an Anti-Biofilm Peptide.
PLoS ONE
title Treatment of Oral Multispecies Biofilms by an Anti-Biofilm Peptide.
title_full Treatment of Oral Multispecies Biofilms by an Anti-Biofilm Peptide.
title_fullStr Treatment of Oral Multispecies Biofilms by an Anti-Biofilm Peptide.
title_full_unstemmed Treatment of Oral Multispecies Biofilms by an Anti-Biofilm Peptide.
title_short Treatment of Oral Multispecies Biofilms by an Anti-Biofilm Peptide.
title_sort treatment of oral multispecies biofilms by an anti biofilm peptide
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4500547?pdf=render
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