Covalent gentamicin immobilisation resulted in effective antibacterial protection of vascular prostheses against clinical and reference strains of S. aureus, E. coli and P. aeruginosa and allowed for a strong adherence of endothelial cells to antibiotic-modified prostheses.
Results of a novel method of covalent bonding of an antibiotic (gentamicin) to silica bead supports are shown. Gentamicin was immobilized to four types of matrix: silica gel and porous glass beads activated by either silanization (APTES) or by adhesively bound keratin (with immobilization yield ranging from 36.5 to 91%). Gentamicin was immobilized to the supports after opening its carbohydrate ring in the molecule. This method of gentamicin activation before the immobilization process did not inhibit its antibiotic activity. The four gentamicin-containing immobilized preparations were stable, meaning that they did not release the antibiotic into the solution during the 30 days of incubation, not even during shaking experiments.
Three bioactive fractions isolated from Cerrena unicolor cultures-crude endopolysaccharide (c-EPS), laccase, and a subfraction of low-molecular weight secondary metabolites-were used to determine potential cytotoxic effects on the mouse melanoma B16-F10 cell line (American Type Culture Collection CRL-6475). The results obtained prove that all examined fractions exhibited activity against the investigated tumor cells. In addition, an evident immunomodulatory effect of the c-EPS fraction was observed. Our results show that the levels of 2 cytokines (tumor necrosis factor-a and chemokine ligand 2) in mouse inner medullary collecting duct mIMCD-3 cells (American Type Culture Collection CRL-2123) stimulated by c-EPS were significantly higher. A lipopolysaccharide model was used at the same concentration (10 μg/mL) as a positive control.
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