In Vitro Antibacterial Activity of Microbial Natural Products against Bacterial Pathogens of Veterinary and Zoonotic Relevance

Author:

Barth Stefanie A.1ORCID,Preussger Daniel1,Pietschmann Jana1,Feßler Andrea T.23,Heller Martin1,Herbst Werner4,Schnee Christiane1ORCID,Schwarz Stefan23ORCID,Kloss Florian5,Berens Christian1ORCID,Menge Christian1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Friedrich-Loeffler-Institut—Federal Research Institute for Animal Health (FLI), Institute of Molecular Pathogenesis, 07743 Jena, Germany

2. Institute of Microbiology and Epizootics, Freie Universität Berlin, 14163 Berlin, Germany

3. Veterinary Centre for Resistance Research (TZR), Freie Universität Berlin, 14163 Berlin, Germany

4. Institute of Hygiene and Infectious Diseases of Animals, Justus-Liebig-University, 35392 Giessen, Germany

5. Transfer Group Anti-Infectives, Leibniz Institute for Natural Product Research and Infection Biology, Leibniz-HKI, 07745 Jena, Germany

Abstract

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is considered one of the greatest threats to both human and animal health. Efforts to address AMR include implementing antimicrobial stewardship programs and introducing alternative treatment options. Nevertheless, effective treatment of infectious diseases caused by bacteria will still require the identification and development of new antimicrobial agents. Eight different natural products were tested for antimicrobial activity against seven pathogenic bacterial species (Brachyspira sp., Chlamydia sp., Clostridioides sp., Mannheimia sp., Mycobacterium sp., Mycoplasma sp., Pasteurella sp.). In a first pre-screening, most compounds (five out of eight) inhibited bacterial growth only at high concentrations, but three natural products (celastramycin A [CA], closthioamide [CT], maduranic acid [MA]) displayed activity at concentrations <2 µg/mL against Pasteurella sp. and two of them (CA and CT) also against Mannheimia sp. Those results were confirmed by testing a larger collection of isolates encompassing 64 Pasteurella and 56 Mannheimia field isolates originating from pigs or cattle, which yielded MIC90 values of 0.5, 0.5, and 2 µg/mL against Pasteurella and 0.5, 4, and >16 µg/mL against Mannheimia for CA, CT, and MA, respectively. CA, CT, and MA exhibited higher MIC50 and MIC90 values against Pasteurella isolates with a known AMR phenotype against commonly used therapeutic antimicrobial agents than against isolates with unknown AMR profiles. This study demonstrates the importance of whole-cell antibacterial screening of natural products to identify promising scaffolds with broad- or narrow-spectrum antimicrobial activity against important Gram-negative veterinary pathogens with zoonotic potential.

Funder

consortium InfectControl and the German Ministry for Education and Research

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical),General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics,Biochemistry,Microbiology

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