Universal Anti-PAMP Agent to Improve Wound Healing

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R03 · $73,949 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Innate immunity has considerable specificity and can discriminate between individual species of microbes. In this regard, pathogens are “seen” as dangerous to the host and elicit an inflammatory response capable of destroying the microbes. This immune discrimination is achieved through the recognition of microbe- specific molecules (e.g., lipopolysaccharide, lipoteichoic acid, and peptidoglycan) by toll-like receptors on host cells. Lipopolysaccharide, lipoteichoic acid, and peptidoglycan arising from dangerous bacteria are known as Pathogen-Associated Molecular Pattern (PAMP) molecules. PAMPs impede wound healing by lengthening the inflammatory phase of healing and contributing to the development of chronic wounds. Preventing PAMPs from triggering the release of inflammatory cytokines will restore the optimal inflammatory response. However, successful drugs are elusive because PAMPs originate from many different species of Gram-negative and Gram- positive bacteria. Therefore, the need exists for a universal broad-spectrum therapeutic against LPS, LTA, and PGN bacterial PAMPs. The objective of this project is to investigate PEG-BPEI structure-activity relationships. The central hypothesis is that increasing the steric bulk of PEG-BPEI reduces its ability to bind with PAMPs from S. aureus, P. aeruginosa, E. coli, and K. pneumoniae and thus is unable to interfere with PAMP recognition by PRRs. We will test our central hypothesis with the following specific aims: Aim 1: Correlate PEG-BPEI steric effects with PAMP binding; Aim 2: Discover how PAMP + PEG-BPEI combinations reduce PRR activation. Data arising from these aims will be significant because they are expected to provide strong scientific justification for the continued development of anti-inflammatory agents applied to acute and chronic wounds. This project has added significance because the data will be used to evaluate the strategy of using this agent to bind bacterial PAMPs and prevent cytokine release; a strategy that enables other subsequent research and thinking. The proposed work is innovative because we fill the technological gap with multi-purpose agents that disable PAMPs, dissolve biofilms, and overcome antibiotic resistance mechanisms, making them superior to existing technology. The rationale is that the agent will improve wound healing by counteracting LPS, LTA, and PGN bacterial products that cause inflammation. Determining the ability to inhibit inflammatory cytokine release is necessary to evaluate the therapeutic opportunities of the chemical molecules. We envision our discoveries as topical agents applied to acute and chronic wounds because, in addition to the active moiety of the agent preventing cytokine release, it also disables antibiotic resistance mechanisms and disrupts the biofilm matrix. This versatility of this agent suggests that it may be an ideal therapeutic agent for use in the hundreds of millions of non-chronic skin or soft- tissue infections (SSTIs), and t...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10527023
Project number
1R03AI166402-01A1
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA
Principal Investigator
Charles V Rice
Activity code
R03
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$73,949
Award type
1
Project period
2022-06-16 → 2024-05-31