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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, May 2005, p. 1770-1774, Vol. 49, No. 5
0066-4804/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.49.5.1770-1774.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Microbiology,1 Department of Analytical Chemistry of Medicines, Showa Pharmaceutical University, Machida, Tokyo 194-8543, Japan2
Received 10 June 2004/ Returned for modification 15 September 2004/ Accepted 2 February 2005
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It is difficult to estimate the antibacterial activities of many plant-derived compounds because of their low solubility in water. Solubilizers, such as surfactants and alcohols, have been used to overcome this problem, but it can be difficult to distinguish the contribution to the antibacterial activity of the solubilizer from the contribution of the compound under investigation. Arai et al. established the broth dilution with shaking (BDS) method to solve this problem (2), and this method has been used to investigate the antibacterial activities of essential oils and their constituents against Staphylococcus aureus, which is one of the major pathogens responsible for nosocomial infections (1, 10). Studies using the BDS method revealed, for example, that farnesol, nerolidol, and plaunotol can inhibit the growth of S. aureus (5, 6). Farnesol and nerolidol are sesquiterpenes, and plaunotol is a diterpene, and a common feature of these compounds is a long aliphatic carbon chain. Monoterpenes do not effectively inhibit the growth of S. aureus (5), and the antibacterial activities of diterpenes remain to be clarified. Therefore, to investigate the antibacterial activities of diterpene alcohols in detail, we decided to examine diterpenes with one oxygen atom in their structure.
In this study, we estimated the antibacterial activities of geranylgeraniol, teprenone, and phytol against S. aureus by the BDS method to clarify the antibacterial activities of diterpenes with long aliphatic carbon chains. We also performed time-kill assays and measured the leakage of K+ ions from bacterial cells to confirm the validity of the BDS method.
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S. aureus FDA209P was used as the standard strain (2).
BDS method. The BDS method was described previously (10), and we applied it as follows. The compound to be tested was added, at the indicated concentrations, to 10-ml aliquots of brain heart infusion (BHI) broth (Difco, Detroit, Mich.) in L-tubes (internal diameter, 17 mm; length of arms, 180 mm and 70 mm) without any solubilizing agent or surfactant. An aliquot of an overnight culture of S. aureus was added to each sample to give approximately 105 CFU of S. aureus per ml. Each culture was incubated, with shaking at 40 rpm, in air for 24 h at 37°C. The inhibitory activity of each tested compound was monitored turbidimetrically. The optical density at 660 nm (OD660) was determined with a biophotorecorder (TN-1520; Advantec, Tokyo, Japan).
The delay in proliferation was calculated from a comparison with the growth curve generated from a control culture.
Quantitation of leakage of K+ ions. The concentration of K+ ions in 4.0 ml of a suspension of cells (initially, 109 CFU/ml) was determined with K+-selective and reference electrodes. A silver/silver chloride electrode was used as the reference electrode. The K+-selective electrode was prepared using valinomycin as described by Katsu et al. (8). The system for quantitation of K+ ions was constructed as reported previously (7). Compounds were added to 100-µl aliquots of cell suspensions. Each assay was performed at 37°C. Data were recorded digitally. Amounts and initial rates of efflux of K+ ions that leaked from cells were expressed in terms of bacterial mass. For estimations of the bacterial mass in each test suspension, bacterial cells were disrupted by sonication and centrifuged (30,000 rpm, 1 h, 4°C), and then the concentration of protein in the supernatant was determined as described by Bradford (3), with bovine serum albumin as the standard protein.
Time-kill assay. Cells from an overnight culture of S. aureus were washed twice with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS; pH 7.0). The cell pellet was resuspended in 1 ml of PBS at 7 x 106 CFU/ml. An aliquot of 100 µl of this suspension was added to 10 ml of buffer that contained geranylgeraniol, teprenone, or phytol (Fig. 1) at the indicated concentrations, and the mixture was incubated at 37°C. The buffer did not contain any solubilizer. Samples were removed for determination of viable cell counts after 0, 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, and 24 h. Serial 10-fold dilutions of the samples of bacterial suspensions (101 to 104) were prepared in PBS. Aliquots of 50 µl of each serially diluted sample were plated on agar-solidified Mueller Hinton broth (Difco, Detroit, Mich.) with a spiral plater (Autoplate 3000; Spiral Biotech, Bethesda, Md.). The plates were incubated at 37°C for 24 h, and then colonies were counted. Killing curves were constructed by plotting numbers of viable cells against time. All assays were performed in triplicate.
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FIG. 1. Structures of diterpenes used in the present study: geranylgeraniol (a), teprenone (b), and phytol (c).
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FIG. 2. Inhibitory effects of geranylgeraniol on the growth of S. aureus FDA209P. S. aureus FDA209P was inoculated into BHI broth medium that contained no geranylgeraniol ( ) or into broth that contained geranylgeraniol at 0.15 (), 0.3 ( ), 0.6 ( ), or 1.25 ( ) µg/ml (a) or 1.25 ( ), 2.5 ( ), 5.0 ( ), 10 ( ), 20 (), 40 ( ), 80 ( ), or 160 ( ) µg/ml (b), and then cell growth was monitored in terms of the OD660.
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FIG. 3. Effects of diterpenes on the growth of S. aureus FDA209P. Each delay in proliferation was calculated from the growth curve of a control culture and that of a culture that contained the indicated diterpene at the indicated concentration. Symbols: , geranylgeraniol; , teprenone; and , phytol.
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Figure 4 shows the changes in viable cell counts in suspensions of bacteria that contained individual diterpenes at various concentrations. Bacterial growth was observed at all concentrations tested.
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FIG. 4. Changes in the viable cell count of S. aureus FDA209P in medium that contained the diterpenes geranylgeraniol (a), teprenone (b), and phytol (c). S. aureus FDA209P was inoculated into BHI medium that contained no terpene ( ) or that contained a diterpene at 2.5 ( ), 5 ( ), 10 ( ), 20 ( ), 40 ( ), or 80 () µg/ml.
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We next investigated the bactericidal activities of geranylgeraniol, teprenone, and phytol (Fig. 5). Geranylgeraniol decreased the viable cell count by two orders of magnitude within 2 h. The viable cell count decreased with the duration of exposure to this diterpene and fell to approximately 105 CFU/ml after 12 h. No significant differences in bactericidal activity were observed among the various concentrations investigated, which ranged from 10 to 80 µg/ml. We also confirmed the bactericidal activities of teprenone and phytol. The trends in changes in viable cell counts were similar to the results obtained with geranylgeraniol. No significant differences in bactericidal activity were observed among concentrations from 10 to 80 µg/ml.
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FIG. 5. Time-kill assays of the effect of geranylgeraniol (a), teprenone (b), and phytol (c) on S. aureus FDA209P. S. aureus FDA209P was suspended in PBS that contained no terpenes ( ) or in PBS that contained a diterpene at 10 ( ), 20 ( ), 40 ( ), or 80 () µg/ml.
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FIG. 6. Changes in the concentration of K+ ions in suspensions of S. aureus FDA209P in response to 80 µg/ml concentrations of geranylgeraniol (a), teprenone (b), and phytol (c).
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FIG. 7. Leakage of K+ ions from S. aureus FDA209P in response to geranylgeraniol, teprenone, and phytol. Panel a shows the initial rates of leakage of K+ ions, and panel b shows the total amounts of K+ ions leaked from bacteria. Symbols: , geranylgeraniol; , teprenone; and , phytol.
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The time-kill assay demonstrated that the diterpenes also had bactericidal activity, which was not dependent on concentration over a given range. The diterpenes had similar activities at the concentrations above which their growth-inhibitory activities decreased.
The leakage of K+ ions started just after the addition of each diterpene (Fig. 6), as observed previously for farnesol, nerolidol, and plaunotol (data not shown). These compounds are also terpenes with long aliphatic carbon chains. Hada et al. and Cox et al. reported that the initial rate of K+ efflux and total leakage of K+ ions provide estimates of antibacterial activity against S. aureus (4, 7). The growth curves and leakage of K+ ions indicate that the diterpenes used in this study damaged cell membranes to allow leakage of K+ ions from cells, and their inhibitory effects on the growth of S. aureus corresponded to their abilities to damage cell membranes. The extent of leakage of K+ ions after membrane damage varied with the final concentration of each diterpene.
Results of time-kill assays suggested that constant bactericidal effects were achieved independently of final concentrations between 10 and 80 µg/ml. Inhibitory effects on cell growth decreased at elevated concentrations, even though a certain fraction of the bacteria in each bacterial suspension was killed. Thus, surviving bacteria grew faster than did cells under control conditions. It appears that the diterpenes used in this study have both growth-inhibitory and growth-accelerating activities. The net effects depended on the final concentration, with inhibitory activity predominating at lower concentrations.
At lower concentrations, the inhibitory effects of the tested diterpenes were reflected by the leakage of K+ ions, with higher rates of leakage and larger amounts of leaked K+ ions as the concentrations of the diterpenes increased. Beyond a certain concentration, however, the growth-accelerating effect was predominant, and surviving bacteria took up K+ ions faster than those in the control medium without diterpenes.
Our results indicate that it is possible to reverse the effects of diterpenes on the growth of S. aureus. They also suggest the importance of investigating antibacterial activity in detail by dynamic assay methods since it is impossible to detect biphasic activity by static assay methods, such as the microbroth dilution method.
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