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Article

The Effects of Two Novel Copper-Based Formulations on Helicobacter pylori

1
First Medical Clinic, University of Bologna, Bologna 40121, Italy
2
Department of Health & Social Sciences, University of Middlesex, NW4 4Bt London, UK
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Antibiotics 2013, 2(2), 265-273; https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics2020265
Submission received: 30 March 2013 / Revised: 1 May 2013 / Accepted: 7 May 2013 / Published: 21 May 2013

Abstract

:
We investigated the effects of two novel copper-based inorganic formulations for their activity against 60 isolates of Helicobacter pylori (Hp). The two copper-based formulations were tested against three NCTC Helicobacter pylori isolates and 57 clinical strains isolated from the UK and Italy in time-kill assays. Both copper-based formulations were bio-cidal against all Helicobacter pylori strains tested reducing the viable count by 4–5 log within 2 h. These two copper-based anti-microbial agents deserve further study in relation to the treatment of H. pylori-related gastric disease.

1. Introduction

Helicobacter pylori is a gram negative, microaerophilic bacterium found principally in the stomach [1]. Infection with this organism is one of the most widespread human infections that affects up to 50% of the world’s population. Epidemiological studies have clearly demonstrated a major aetiological role for Helicobacter pylori in peptic ulcer disease, gastric MALT [mucosal associated lymphoid tissues] lymphoma, and distal gastric cancer [2,3,4,5]. Clarithromycin or metronidazole combined with amoxicillin and a proton pump inhibitor is the most frequently used regimen for first-line Helicobacter pylori therapy (standard triple therapy) in clinical practice in Europe as well as US [6]. This regimen is also advocated in the European Helicobacter Study Group (EHSG) Maastricht 2006 Guidelines. However, there are a number of problems with this approach. Currently, standard triple therapy fails to eradicate Helicobacter pylori infection in more than a third of patients [7]. Increasing primary resistance to clarithromycin or metronidazole, reported by different studies [8,9,10], is widely claimed as the most important factor reducing the efficacy of therapy. The prevalence of clarithromycin resistance varies between 6.1% to 14.5% in the USA and may be as high as 24% in some European countries, while the prevalence of metronidazole resistance ranges from 25% to 38% in Western countries, and up to 77% in some Asian countries. Amoxycillin resistance is rare. In a recent study, increasing rates of clarithromycin resistance (8.7%, 23.5% 26.7%, 34.5% were paralleled by falling eradication rates (90.6%, 80.2% 76% 74.8%) respectively [11].
A recently suggested first line treatment is sequential therapy, where the main aim is to overcome clarithromycin resistance [12]. Amoxycillin is given for five days followed by the addition of clarithromycin and a nitroimidazole for five days with a proton pump inhibitor given for the whole 10 days. Reported eradication rates are over 93.4% and are thus much better than current triple therapy results [13]. However, even this is only a Grade B success: a Grade A success is defined as >95% eradication [14,15,16]. It has also been suggested that sequential therapy should be a second-line therapy not a first line therapy. In areas where clarithromycin resistance is low, various modifications of sequential therapy have been used but none achieving Grade A eradication.
The management of Helicobacter pylori infection after a failed course of initial treatment is considered more difficult, mainly due to selection of bacterial strains resistant to the antibiotics used in the primary eradication attempt. Thus, optimal therapy after first-line treatment failure remains controversial due to the lack of large randomized cohort studies and the lack of homogeneity of patients studied. In second or third line therapy, only a few antibiotics against Helicobacter pylori infection are suitable, such as bismuth compounds, levofloxacin, rifabutin or furazolidone, which are used in triple or quadruple regimes [6].
In summary, the treatment of Helicobacter associated disease is beset by the following problems: (1) Increasing antibiotic resistance; (2) Decreasing eradication rates from >90% to ~70%; (3) The need to take lots of tablets and therefore compliance problems leading to antibiotic resistance and failure of eradication; (4) The association of proton pump inhibitor use with Clostridium difficile colitis [17]. For these reason potential alternative treatments have been investigated such as inhibition of binding [18], photodynamic therapy [19], biocidal action of spices [20], anti-malarial drugs [21], essential oils [22] and other botanical extracts [23]. In this study, we have investigated the efficacy of novel highly reductive copper compounds for their bactericidal activity against Helicobacter pylori.

2. Results and Discussion

2.1. Kill Curves of 5 NCTC/Clinical Isolates

Both CuAL42 and CuPC33 had significant antimicrobial activity against Helicobacter pylori. A kill curve of ATCC strain J99 is illustrated in Figure 1. The kill curve of two NCTC isolates that were either Type II (cagA negative) or Type I (cagA positive) and 2 clinical isolates that were separately metronidazole resistant or clarithromycin resistant is illustrated in Figure 2 (a–d respectively) and demonstrated both compounds had similar activity and killed or reduced the number of bacteria by log >6 at 12 ppm, irrespective of virulence marker or antibiotic sensitivity.
Figure 1. Time-kill curves with CuAL42 and CuPC33 on the antibiotic-sensitive H. pylori strain, J99.Star, control; closed square, CuAL42 0.5 mg/L; closed triangle, CuAL42 1 mg/L; closed upside-down triangle, CuAL42 5 mg/L; closed diamond, CuAL42 12 mg/L; open square, CuPC33 0.5 mg/L; open triangle, CuPC33 1 mg/L; open upside-down triangle, CuPC33 5 mg/L; open diamond, CuPC33 12 mg/L. The results shown are the means of triplicate observations. Error bars representing standard deviations (less than 10%) are not shown for reasons of clarity.
Figure 1. Time-kill curves with CuAL42 and CuPC33 on the antibiotic-sensitive H. pylori strain, J99.Star, control; closed square, CuAL42 0.5 mg/L; closed triangle, CuAL42 1 mg/L; closed upside-down triangle, CuAL42 5 mg/L; closed diamond, CuAL42 12 mg/L; open square, CuPC33 0.5 mg/L; open triangle, CuPC33 1 mg/L; open upside-down triangle, CuPC33 5 mg/L; open diamond, CuPC33 12 mg/L. The results shown are the means of triplicate observations. Error bars representing standard deviations (less than 10%) are not shown for reasons of clarity.
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Figure 2. Time-kill curves with CuAL42 and CuPC33 on (a) CagA; (b) CagA+; (c) metronidazole-resistant and (d) clarithromycin-resistant H. pylori strains. Star, control; closed square, CuAL42 5 mg/L; closed triangle, CuAL42 12 mg/L; open square, CuPC33 5 mg/L; open triangle, CuPC33 12 mg/L. The results shown are the means of triplicate observations. Error bars representing standard deviations (less than 10%) are not shown for reasons of clarity.
Figure 2. Time-kill curves with CuAL42 and CuPC33 on (a) CagA; (b) CagA+; (c) metronidazole-resistant and (d) clarithromycin-resistant H. pylori strains. Star, control; closed square, CuAL42 5 mg/L; closed triangle, CuAL42 12 mg/L; open square, CuPC33 5 mg/L; open triangle, CuPC33 12 mg/L. The results shown are the means of triplicate observations. Error bars representing standard deviations (less than 10%) are not shown for reasons of clarity.
Antibiotics 02 00265 g002

2.2. Activity of CuAL42 and CuPC33 against 57 Clinical Isolates

The average reduction of viability for the 57 isolates is shown in Figure 3. The reduction in viability for both CuPC33 and CuAL42 was significant (p = 0.0001). The number of strains that were killed at 1 and 2 h is shown in Figure 4 where CuAL42 was slightly more active than CuPC33.
The resistance rates of the clinical isolates were clarithromycin, (41%) metronidazole (58%) and levofloxacin (20%). Antibiotic resistance bore no relationship to the efficacy of the copper compound.
Figure 3. Mean Activity of CuAL42&CuPC33 against 53 clinical isolates of H. pylori. (AL42 = CuAL42; PC33 = CuPC33).
Figure 3. Mean Activity of CuAL42&CuPC33 against 53 clinical isolates of H. pylori. (AL42 = CuAL42; PC33 = CuPC33).
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Figure 4. Number of H. pylori isolates killed at one hour (T1) and two hours (T2) by CuAL42 and CuPC33 (PC33 = CuPC33; AL42 = CuPC42).
Figure 4. Number of H. pylori isolates killed at one hour (T1) and two hours (T2) by CuAL42 and CuPC33 (PC33 = CuPC33; AL42 = CuPC42).
Antibiotics 02 00265 g004

2.3. Discussion

Previous studies have demonstrated these copper complexes killed Acinetobacter baumanii (ACCB) and methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) at a concentration of 150 ppm within 2 h, compared to equivalent concentrations of copper sulfate and the inorganic binders. At a concentration of 20 ppm the copper-based compounds also completely inhibited colony formation of ACCB and MRSA, but this required 16 hr of exposure [24]. More recently organo-metallic complexes including copper-fluoroquinolone have shown good antimicrobial activity against a small number of Helicobacter pylori strains [25]. In this study, we have analyzed the activity of CuPC33 and CuAL42 copper complexes against 60 stains of Helicobacter pylori and shown bactericidal activity against all isolates at a low concentration (12 ppm) within a period of 2 h. With increasing time, increasing numbers were killed. The specific advantage of the CuPC33 and CuAL42-complexes in this study, over the antibiotic-metal complexes [25], is the absence of any antibiotic. This suggests a lack of generating antibiotic resistant strains and possible not predisposing the patient to Clostridium difficile associated disease, although these effects would have to be confirmed by future work.
Several mechanisms and target sites of action have been proposed for this very broad spectrum of biocidal activity of copper. Firstly, copper is a highly redox-active metallo-ion that promotes membrane lipid peroxidation, which in turn damages bacterial plasma membrane integrity [26]. Secondly, copper binds and disorders helical DNA by engaging this structure at two different binding sites, explaining its activity against a wide range of viruses [27]. Thirdly, copper facilitates free radical–mediated degradation of proteins, which includes on the one hand oxidation of specific amino acid residues, and on the other degradation of sulfydryl moieties [28]. The mechanism by which the inorganic binders so effectively enhance copper’s biocidal activity is currently under investigation. Preliminary experiments using scanning electron microscopy indicate that exposure of ACCB to CuAL42 (150 ppm) for 20 min causes extensive membrane “blebbing” [24].
Previous work has indicated a lack of cytotoxicity for eukaryotic cells indicating a selective toxicity for bacterial cells at the concentrations used [24,29]. Eukaryotic cells have a recognized ability to withstand copper toxicity by well characterized, often highly complex mechanisms of intracellular protein-dependent coordination, chelation, and transport, and to well characterized extracellular binding pathways in multicellular higher organisms [30].
Finally, the use of copper complex for Helicobacter pylori-associated peptic ulcer disease has one further possible advantage: that of enhancing ulcer healing. One of the earliest events in ulcer healing is rapid epithelial cell migration leading to reconstitution of the epithelium [31]. This is followed by cell proliferation, which restores the mucosal epithelium to its normal thickness. Angiogenesis is essential for providing blood flow to the re-establishing epithelium and for the creation of new glands [32]. In animal models, it has been shown that the ulcer repair process can be accelerated by the administration of epidermal growth factor (EGF) via an effect on both angiogenesis and re-epithelialization [33]. Copper is recognized to have angiogenic properties by stimulating VEGF and hypoxia-inducible factor-1 alpha [34,35] and it is not unreasonable to suppose that these copper complexes may have a similar action, although experimental data is currently lacking.

3. Experimental

3.1. Materials

Bacteria: 3 NCTC cultures—NCTC11637, NCTC 12908, ACTC J99 and 57 clinical isolates, 43 from Italy and 14 from the UK were used. Copper compounds: The two copper-based formulations—CuPC33 and CuAL42—were provided by Remedy Research Ltd. These formulations are composed of copper sulfate and two inorganic compounds that form the metallo-ion binders. The binders comprise an ammonium salt and an inorganic acid—ammonium phosphate and phosphoric acid in PC33 and ammonium sulfate and sulfuric acid in AL42. The concentration of elemental copper in each stock solution was 30.43 g/L.

3.2. Determination of Antibiotic Sensitivity

Clarithromycin, levofloxacin and metronidazole sensitivity was determined on all isolates using European Guidelines [36]. Briefly, testing was performed on Muller Hinton agar containing 10% horse blood with an inoculum of 0.5 × 109. Plates were incubated at 37 °C in a micro-aerobic atmosphere (CampyGen Oxoid, Basingstoke, UK) for 3 days. Clarithromycin and levofloxacin resistance was determined by E test (AB Biodisc Solna Sweden) with resistance recorded as > or equal to 1.0 g/mL for both and resistance to metronidazole determined by breakpoint agar streak with growth at 8.0 g/mL denoting resistance.

3.3. Determination of Activity of CuAL42 and CuPC33

Cag A positive (NCTC11637); CagA negative (NCTC 12908 and ACTC J99) and 57 clinical isolates were tested. For 5 of the isolates (3 Type strains and 2 clinical isolates) a time-kill curve was performed with an inoculum of 107−8 cfu/mL in sterile water at differing concentrations (0.5, 1.0, 5.0, and 12 ppm) of the two copper compounds CuAL42 and CuPC33 against a control containing either sterile water, copper sulfate or binders, for 30, 60 and 120 minutes. At each time point, samples were withdrawn, decimal diluted into ¼ strength Ringers lactate, plated onto blood agar (Oxoid Ltd.) and incubated. Subsequently all the isolates were tested by agar incorporation using Muller Hinton agar with 10% horse blood at the same inoculum against 12 ppm for 60 and 120 mins. The plates were incubated for 5 days at 37 °C in an atmosphere generated by CampyGen (Oxoid Ltd.).

3.4. Statistics

A student’s t-test was performed comparing the mean viable count of the control against the test for both agents at T1 and T2.

4. Conclusions

Our conclusions are that these reductive copper compounds deserve further studies in relation to the mechanism of killing, resistance rate and effects on ulcer healing separate from the bactericidal activity reported here.

Acknowledgments

The work was carried out in the Department of Clinical Microbiology, University College London Hospital Trust and financial support was from Departmental and private grant funds. The copper (CuPC33 and CuAL42) compounds were invented, patented, developed and provided by Stephen Hickok. We would like to specially thank Tony J. Hall for his important contribution. These copper biocides are available for research purposes upon request to Hickok.

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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MDPI and ACS Style

Saracino, I.M.; Zaccaro, C.; Re, G.L.; Vaira, D.; Holton, J. The Effects of Two Novel Copper-Based Formulations on Helicobacter pylori. Antibiotics 2013, 2, 265-273. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics2020265

AMA Style

Saracino IM, Zaccaro C, Re GL, Vaira D, Holton J. The Effects of Two Novel Copper-Based Formulations on Helicobacter pylori. Antibiotics. 2013; 2(2):265-273. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics2020265

Chicago/Turabian Style

Saracino, Ilaria M., Cristina Zaccaro, Giovanna Lo Re, Dino Vaira, and John Holton. 2013. "The Effects of Two Novel Copper-Based Formulations on Helicobacter pylori" Antibiotics 2, no. 2: 265-273. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics2020265

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