Affiliation:
1. Infectious Diseases, Department of Biomedicine, University Hospital, Basel, Switzerland
2. University Medical Clinic, Kantonsspital, Liestal, Switzerland
3. Infectious Diseases Service, Department of Internal Medicine, University Hospital, and University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Ga
3+
is a semimetal element that competes for the iron-binding sites of transporters and enzymes. We investigated the activity of gallium maltolate (GaM), an organic gallium salt with high solubility, against laboratory and clinical strains of methicillin-susceptible
Staphylococcus aureus
(MSSA), methicillin-resistant
S. aureus
(MRSA), methicillin-susceptible
Staphylococcus epidermidis
(MSSE), and methicillin-resistant
S. epidermidis
(MRSE) in logarithmic or stationary phase and in biofilms. The MICs of GaM were higher for
S. aureus
(375 to 2000 μg/ml) than
S. epidermidis
(94 to 200 μg/ml). Minimal biofilm inhibitory concentrations were 3,000 to ≥6,000 μg/ml (
S. aureus
) and 94 to 3,000 μg/ml (
S. epidermidis
). In time-kill studies, GaM exhibited a slow and dose-dependent killing, with maximal action at 24 h against
S. aureus
of 1.9 log
10
CFU/ml (MSSA) and 3.3 log
10
CFU/ml (MRSA) at 3× MIC and 2.9 log
10
CFU/ml (MSSE) and 4.0 log
10
CFU/ml (MRSE) against
S. epidermidis
at 10× MIC. In calorimetric studies, growth-related heat production was inhibited by GaM at subinhibitory concentrations; and the minimal heat inhibition concentrations were 188 to 4,500 μg/ml (MSSA), 94 to 1,500 μg/ml (MRSA), and 94 to 375 μg/ml (MSSE and MRSE), which correlated well with the MICs. Thus, calorimetry was a fast, accurate, and simple method useful for investigation of antimicrobial activity at subinhibitory concentrations. In conclusion, GaM exhibited activity against staphylococci in different growth phases, including in stationary phase and biofilms, but high concentrations were required. These data support the potential topical use of GaM, including its use for the treatment of wound infections, MRSA decolonization, and coating of implants.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
Cited by
67 articles.
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