Many antibiotic resistances to penicillin have been reported,
making
them obsolete against multiresistant bacteria. Because penicillins
act by inhibiting cell wall production while silver particles disrupt
the cell wall directly, a synergetic effect is anticipated when both
modes of action are incorporated into a chimera cluster.
To test this hypothesis, the lipoate ligands (LA) of a silver cluster
(Ag29) of known composition (Ag29LA12)[3−] were covalently conjugated to 6-aminopenicillanic
acid, a molecule with a β-lactam backbone. Indeed, the partially
conjugated cluster inhibited an Staphylococcus aureus biofilm, in a dose–response manner, with a half-maximal inhibitory
concentration IC50 of 2.3 μM, an improvement over
60 times relative to the unconjugated cluster (IC50 = 140
μM). An enhancement of several orders of magnitude over 6-APA
alone (unconjugated) was calculated (IC50 = 10 000
μM). Cell wall damage is documented via scanning electron microscopy.
A synergistic effect of the conjugate was calculated by the combination
index method described by Chou–Talalay. This hybrid nanoantibiotic
opens a new front against multidrug-resistant pathogens.
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