Abstract

The rising threat to antibiotic armamentarium demand innovative methods to use standard antibiotics against multidrug-resistant (MDR) pathogens. Herein, we demonstrated phytolectin-cationic lipid complex have the ability to renew the ciprofloxacin (CIP) activity against MDR uropathogenic Escherichia coli (R4UPEC). The minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC) obtained for CIP against R4UPEC studied were very high (MIC = 1000 µM) which may not be suitable for clinical testing. Strikingly, CIP in combination with Butea monosperma seed lectin (BMSL) and cationic lipid, 2-((N-(2-hydroxyethyl)palmitamido)methyl)− 1-methylpyridin-1-ium iodide (cN16E) showed 64-fold lower MIC (15.63 µM). Checkerboard assay revealed that the BMSL-cN16E (BcN16E) complex and CIP work synergistically against R4UPEC. The complex, BcN16E-CIP exerts antimicrobial activity through outer membrane permeabilization, inner membrane disruption, proton motive force dissipation and enhancing the generation of reactive oxygen species. The therapeutic efficacy evaluated in a zebrafish, intramuscular infection model using R4UPEC, the BcN16E-CIP reduce the bacterial load and decrease neutrophil infiltration in muscles and low down the liver cell necrosis. The results demonstrate significantly lower MIC for CIP when complex with BcN16E and showed exceptional in vivo efficacy against infectious MDR bacteria.

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