Antibiotics (Oct 2021)

Antimicrobial Activity of a Lipidated Temporin L Analogue against Carbapenemase-Producing <i>Klebsiella pneumoniae</i> Clinical Isolates

  • Emanuela Roscetto,
  • Rosa Bellavita,
  • Rossella Paolillo,
  • Francesco Merlino,
  • Nicola Molfetta,
  • Paolo Grieco,
  • Elisabetta Buommino,
  • Maria Rosaria Catania

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10111312
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 11
p. 1312

Abstract

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Over the years, the increasing acquisition of antibiotic resistance genes has led to the emergence of highly resistant bacterial strains and the loss of standard antibiotics’ efficacy, including β-lactam/β-lactamase inhibitor combinations and the last line carbapenems. Klebsiella pneumoniae is considered one of the major exponents of a group of multidrug-resistant ESKAPE pathogens responsible for serious healthcare-associated infections. In this study, we proved the antimicrobial activity of two analogues of Temporin L against twenty carbapenemase-producing K. pneumoniae clinical isolates. According to the antibiotic susceptibility assay, all the K. pneumoniae strains were resistant to at least one other class of antibiotics, in addition to beta-lactams. Peptides 1B and C showed activity on all test strains, but the lipidated analogue C expressed the greater antimicrobial properties, with MIC values ranging from 6.25 to 25 µM. Furthermore, the peptide C showed bactericidal activity at MIC values. The results clearly highlight the great potential of antimicrobial peptides both as a new treatment option for difficult-to-treat infections and as a new strategy of drug-resistance control.

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