«In the United States, there are more than 1 million burn injuries and 100,000 hospitalizations annually. Up to 75 percent of the mortality in burn patients is associated with infections, which are particularly common in patients who suffer extensive burns — those that cover 40 percent or more of the body," said Dr. Steven Wolf, Section Chief for Burns and Professor of Surgery at UT Southwestern Medical Center.
Dr. Wolf, one of three senior authors of the study published today in Scientific Reports, is also a former Director of the Burn Center at the
«Rather than killing the bacteria, we blinded them so they could not find the places where they normally stick to the host (body’s) cells. If bacteria cannot bind, they cannot grow," said Dr. Wolf, who is also Surgery’s Vice Chair for Research and holder of the Golden Charity Guild Charles R. Baxter,
The study done in rats targeted one of the most lethal pathogens:
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«Our approach doesn’t target bacterial survival; rather it targets the microbes’ ability to damage the host — its virulence. There is no reason for the bacteria to become resistant to this approach. Being unable to bind to wounded tissue is an inconvenience, and the bacteria move on," Dr. Orth said.
She compared the situation to the search for parking at a shopping mall.
«If all the parking spaces are filled, then the bacteria have no place to park," said Dr. Orth, a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator who also holds the Earl A. Forsythe Chair in Biomedical Science and is a
The experimental molecule was developed in the Orth laboratory and grew out of the postdoctoral research project of the study’s third senior author, Dr.
When working at UT Southwestern, Dr. Krachler studied a group of adhesion molecules called adhesins that are created by bacteria to bind, or stick to cells in an early and crucial step in causing infection. Although most adhesins are specific to various pathogens, members of the adhesion family she identified — Multivalent Adhesion Molecules, including MAM7 — are used by most
In one UTSW experiment, Dr. Krachler detached MAM7 from the bacteria that produce it and showed that the lack of MAM7 made the bacteria much less able to cause infection. In 2013, Dr. Orth gave a UT Southwestern President’s Lecture describing the molecular activity of MAM7. Dr. Wolf was in attendance, and approached Dr. Orth about a collaboration to test the efficacy of MAM7 using a fluorescent strain of
That led to the multiyear effort to develop the recombinant MAM7 inhibitor attached to a scaffold made of
«We attached lots of copies of MAM7 to the microbeads. In this study, we found that topically applied
In addition to burns, Dr. Krachler said, this strategy could work against diabetic ulcers and surgical wounds that can become infected.
«What’s exciting about MAM7 is that the agent is so
«Antibiotics are amazing drugs, and they have saved countless lives since their discovery more than 80 years ago. But there is a challenge — the challenge of antibiotic resistance that has made many antibiotics ineffective. A material that targets virulence instead of killing bacteria could be a way to treat infections that are resistant to antibiotics," she said. «This is a trial in rats. A future goal is to use this strategy in patients.»
Following the success of this
UT Southwestern
The research received support from the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council in the United Kingdom; the National Institutes of Health; Once Upon a Time…; the Welch Foundation; the Howard Hughes Medical Institute; the Golden Charity Guild Charles R. Baxter Chair in Burn Surgery, which provided additional research funding; and the Burroughs Welcome Fund.
The
Source: http://www.utsouthwestern.edu/newsroom/news-releases/year-2016/dec/new-burn-therapy.html