Abstract

Routine antibiotics susceptibility testing still relies on standardized cultivation-based analyses, including measurement of inhibition zones in conventional agar diffusion tests and endpoint turbidity-based measurements. Here, we demonstrate that common off-line monitoring and endpoint determination after 18–24 h could be insufficient for reliable growth-dependent evaluation of antibiotic susceptibility. Different minimal inhibitory concentrations were obtained in 20- and 48 h microdilution plate tests using an Enterococcus faecium clinical isolate (strain UKI-MB07) as a model organism. Hence, we used an on-line kinetic assay for simultaneous cultivation and time-resolved growth analysis in a 96-well format instead of off-line susceptibility testing. Growth of the Enterococcus test organism was delayed up to 30 h in the presence of 0.25 μg mL-1 of vancomycin and 8 μg mL-1 of fosfomycin, after which pronounced growth was observed. Despite the delayed onset of growth, treatment with fosfomycin, daptomycin, fusidic acid, cefoxitin, or gentamicin resulted in higher maximum growth rates and/or higher final optical density values compared with antibiotic-free controls, indicating that growth stimulation and hormetic effects may occur with extended exposure to sublethal antibiotic concentrations. Whereas neither maximum growth rate nor final cell density correlated with antibiotic concentration, the lag phase duration for some antibiotics was a more meaningful indicator of dose-dependent growth inhibition. Our results also reveal that non-temporal growth profiles are only of limited value for cultivation-based antimicrobial silver nanoparticle susceptibility testing. The exposure to Ag(0) nanoparticles led to plasma membrane damage in a concentration-dependent manner and induced oxidative stress in Enterococcus faecium UKI-MB07, as shown by intracellular ROS accumulation.

Highlights

  • Antibiotics are commonly used for the medical treatment of both human and animal diseases, and they are used for prophylaxis in veterinary medicine and promotion of animal growth in intensive livestock farming (Barton, 2000; Sarmah et al, 2006; Singer et al, 2007; Marshall and Levy, 2011)

  • In addition to other severe infections, opportunistic Enterococcus pathogens can cause urinary tract infections, endocarditis, bacteremia, and sepsis, and their emergence in recent years corresponds to an increase in glycopeptide and high-level aminoglycoside resistance (HLAR; European Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance System [EARSS] Annual Report, 2008; Victorian Advisory Committee on Infection Control [VACIC], 2012)

  • EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN FOR ON-LINE SUSCEPTIBILITY TESTING: GENERAL PROPERTIES AND POTENTIAL The spectrum of antibiotics provided in the microdilution plates allows for the specific detection of clinically relevant antibiotic resistance in Gram-positive opportunistic pathogens

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Summary

Introduction

Antibiotics are commonly used for the medical treatment of both human and animal diseases, and they are used for prophylaxis in veterinary medicine and promotion of animal growth in intensive livestock farming (Barton, 2000; Sarmah et al, 2006; Singer et al, 2007; Marshall and Levy, 2011). Inappropriate wastewater treatment technologies combined with the application of antibiotic-containing liquid manure onto agricultural fields and their direct release into surface waters has resulted in extensive and continuous release of antibiotics into the environment (Sarmah et al, 2006; Kümmerer, 2009a). This is thought to be an important triggering factor in the emergence and spread of antibiotic resistance, which has in turn resulted in an increased prevalence of infections with antibioticresistant bacteria (Kümmerer, 2009b; Martinez, 2009a,b; Marshall and Levy, 2011; Rizzo et al, 2013). Some Enterococcus spp. show the highest prevalence of clinical vancomycin resistance, due to the acquisition of www.frontiersin.org

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