4.6 Article

Thermosensitive Hydrogel Wound Dressing Loaded with Bacteriophage Lysin LysP53

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 14, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v14091956

Keywords

bacteriophage; lysin; LysP53; hydrogel; poloxamer 407; wound infection; drug resistance; Acinetobacter baumannii

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32070187, 32161133003, 31770192]

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This study tested the efficacy of a lysin-loaded hydrogel in treating wound infections caused by resistant bacteria. The results showed that the lysin hydrogel effectively inhibited bacterial growth and had no cytotoxic effects on cells.
Wound infections are prone to attacks from infectious pathogens, including multidrug resistant bacteria that render conventional antimicrobials ineffective. Recently, lysins have been proposed as alternatives to conventional antimicrobials to tackle the menace of multidrug resistance pathogens. The coupling of lysins with a material that will cover the wound may prove beneficial in both protecting and treating wound infections. Hence, in this study, a Gram-negative lysin, LysP53, was coupled with a thermosensitive hydrogel, poloxamer P407, and its efficacy to treat wound infection was tested. In vitro, the addition of LysP53 to the poloxamer did not affect its thermosensitive characteristics, nor did it affect the hydrogel structure. Moreover, the lysin hydrogel could hydrolyze the peptidoglycan, demonstrating that it may have bactericidal activity. Up to 10.4% of LysP53 was released from the hydrogel gradually within 24 h, which led to a 4-log reduction of stationary phase Acinetobacter baumannii. Lastly, the lysin hydrogel was found safe with no cytotoxic effects observed in cells. Ex vivo, LysP53 hydrogel could inhibit bacterial growth on a pig skin decolonization model, with 3-log differences compared to non-treated groups. Overall, our results suggest that lysin-loaded hydrogels may provide a novel solution to treat wound infections caused by resistant bacteria.

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