In Vitro and In Vivo Antibiofilm Potential of Eicosane Against Candida albicans

被引:0
作者
Raja Mohamed Beema Shafreen
Siddharthan Seema
Selvaraj Alagu Lakshmi
Adimoolam Srivathsan
Kannapiran Tamilmuhilan
Anupama Shrestha
Balamuralikrishnan Balasubramanian
Ranjithkumar Dhandapani
Ragul Paramasivam
Sami Al Obaid
Saleh H. Salmen
Mohamad Faiz Mohd Amin
Saravanan Muthupandian
机构
[1] Sathyabama Institute of Science and Technology,Department of Biotechnology
[2] Alagappa University,Department of Biotechnology, School of Science
[3] Kathmandu University,Department of Food Science and Biotechnology
[4] Sejong University,Department of Botany and Microbiology, College of Science
[5] Chimertech Private Limited,Faculty of Earth Science
[6] King Saud University,AMR and Nanotherapeutics Lab, Centre for Transdisciplinary Research (CFTR), Department of Pharmacology
[7] Universiti Malaysia Kelantan,undefined
[8] Jeli Campus,undefined
[9] Saveetha Dental College,undefined
[10] Saveetha Institute of Medical and Technical Sciences (SIMATS),undefined
来源
Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology | 2022年 / 194卷
关键词
Eicosane; Antibiofilm; CLSM; Molecular docking; Zebrafish;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Candida albicans is the most prevalent fungus in humans, producing infections ranging from mucosal to systemic. C. albicans colonizes mucosal surfaces asymptomatically as commensal, but, if the host environment is disrupted, or if the host immune system is compromised, C. albicans can multiply and infect almost all places in the host. The present study was aimed to identify a promising antibiofilm agent against Candida albicans biofilm. Through the molecular docking approach, it was identified that Eicosane was the top hit among the alkanes screened. Furthermore, in vitro analysis revealed that Eicosane at 100 µg/mL was able to inhibit 60% of C. albicans biofilm without inhibiting the growth. Moreover, light microscopic investigation unveiled the significant reduction in the adhesion and colonization of yeast cells to the matrix on Eicosane-treated samples. The CLSM images showing a reduction in biomass and thickness of C. albicans biofilm in the presence of Eicosane were validated using COMSTAT. The results were well corroborated with SEM micrograph in which a pellucid gap between the cells was observed and colonization was considerably reduced. Further from qPCR analysis, the genes responsible for biofilm formation and hyphal growth were found to be downregulated in the presence of Eicosane. Similarly, Eicosane at BIC was able to significantly inhibit the adhesion and colonization of yeast cells on the chorion of the zebrafish embryos. Moreover, the binding ability of Eicosane to ALS3 was revealed through docking and molecular dynamics (MD) simulation studies.
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页码:4800 / 4816
页数:16
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