International Journal of Molecular Sciences, Volume 26, Issue 16 , 01/08/2025
Synergistic Antimicrobial Activity of BrSPR20-P1 Peptide and Silver Nanoparticles Against Pathogenic Bacteria
Abstract
Bacterial infection is a cause of life-threatening diseases. The emergence of antimicrobial-resistant bacteria exacerbates this situation, highlighting the need for the discovery of new antimicrobial agents. Our previous study identified a novel antimicrobial peptide, BrSPR20-P1 (P1), which showed potential activity against MRSA. Additionally, silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) exhibit broad-spectrum antibacterial activity, capable of killing multidrug-resistant bacteria. The combination of antimicrobial agents presents a novel strategy for combating these pathogens. This study aimed to evaluate the antibacterial activity of the combination of P1 and AgNPs. It revealed that the combinations showed synergy. The P1 and AgNP mixture at a concentration of 1 and 8 µg/mL (1:8) doubled the activity against S. aureus and MRSA, while that combination of 64 and 64 µg/mL (64:64) exhibited broad-spectrum activity, expanding to E. coli with a 32-fold increase. These combinations exhibited a bactericidal effect, showing the rapid killing of tested bacteria at 10× MIC, with killing rates during the first 3 h ranging from 4.04 ± 0.01 to 4.31 ± 0.03 h<sup>−1</sup>. The P1 and AgNP mixtures caused a low risk of antibacterial resistance up to 30 passages. It was demonstrated that the synergistic activity of P1 and AgNPs occurred through the disruption of cell walls and membranes, leakage of intracellular materials, and cell lysis. Additionally, the mixtures appeared to interact with bacterial genomic DNA, as indicated by a gel retardation assay. These activities of the combinations were concentration-dependent. The 1:8 µg/mL mixture caused low hemolysis and cytotoxicity and did not impede the wound healing process. In contrast, although the 64:64 µg/mL mixture showed excellent antibacterial efficacy, it was toxic to erythrocytes and mammalian cells. It implies that dose optimization is required to balance its efficacy and toxicity. Therefore, the P1 and AgNP combinations exhibit synergistic antimicrobial activity and have the potential to resolve bacterial infections.
Document Type
Article
Source Type
Journal
Keywords
antimicrobial peptideBrevibacillus sp. SPR20silver nanoparticlesynergistic effect
ASJC Subject Area
Chemistry : Inorganic ChemistryChemistry : SpectroscopyComputer Science : Computer Science ApplicationsChemical Engineering : CatalysisBiochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology : Molecular BiologyChemistry : Physical and Theoretical ChemistryChemistry : Organic Chemistry
Funding Agency
Memorial Foundation
Thongin, T., Sawatdee, S., Songnaka, N., Uchiyama, J., Wiwasuku, T., Srichana, T., Nakpheng, T., ... Atipairin, A. (2025). Synergistic Antimicrobial Activity of BrSPR20-P1 Peptide and Silver Nanoparticles Against Pathogenic Bacteria. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 26(16) doi:10.3390/ijms26167832