Antibacterial activity of human defensins on anaerobic intestinal bacterial species: a major role of HBD-3.

Sabine Nuding, Lutz T Zabel, Corinne Enders, Edith Porter, Klaus Fellermann, Jan Wehkamp, Holger A G Mueller, Eduard F Stange

Dr. Margarete Fischer-Bosch-Institute of Clinical Pharmacology Stuttgart and University of Tuebingen, Auerbachstr. 112, 70376 Stuttgart, Germany.

Journal Article: Microbes and Infection (impact factor: 2.76). 02/2009; DOI: 10.1016/j.micinf.2009.01.001

Abstract

Defensins are natural mucosal antimicrobial peptides and their broad spectrum activity against aerobic or facultative anaerobic bacteria has been well investigated. The aim of this study was to systematically examine the antibacterial activity of the small intestinal Paneth cell-derived a-defensin HD5 and the major colonic beta-defensins HBD-1 - 3 against strict anaerobic intestinal bacteria. The antibacterial activity was assessed with a flow cytometric assay employing a membrane potential sensitive dye as marker for loss of cell viability. The majority of the tested strains belonging to the dominant anaerobe genera of the gut, Bacteroides and Parabacteroides, were only minimally affected by the constitutively expressed defensins HD5 and HBD1. The inducible defensin HBD-2 had a limited antibacterial effect, whereas the inducible HBD-3 exhibited potent activity against most strains. The effect of HBD-3 on Bacteroides sp. appeared to be dependent on the presence of oxygen. Bacteroides fragilis strains isolated from blood during bacteraemia or from extraintestinal infections were more resistant to HBD-3 than strains from the physiological gut flora. Thus, defensin resistance is not only species but also strain specific and may be clinically relevant in the host-bacterial interaction influencing mucosal translocation and systemic infection.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

antibacterial activity
 
Bacteroides fragilis strains
 
broad spectrum activity
 
cell viability
 
defensins HD5
 
extraintestinal infections
 
facultative anaerobic bacteria
 
flow cytometric assay
 
inducible defensin HBD-2
 
inducible HBD-3 exhibited potent activity
 
limited antibacterial effect
 
major colonic beta-defensins HBD-1
 
membrane potential sensitive dye
 
physiological gut flora
 
small intestinal Paneth cell-derived a-defensin HD5
 
strain specific
 
strains
 
strict anaerobic intestinal bacteria
 
systemic infection
 
tested strains