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Publication
Featured researches published by Clara Leandro.
Microbial Drug Resistance | 2012
Sofia Fernandes; Daniela Proença; Cátia Cantante; Filipa Maria Rodrigues Pardal Dias Antunes Marcal Da Silva; Clara Leandro; Sara Lourenço; Catarina Milheiriço; Hermínia de Lencastre; Patrícia Cavaco-Silva; Madalena Pimentel; Carlos São-José
Due to their bacterial lytic action, bacteriophage endolysins have recently gained great attention as a potential alternative to antibiotics in the combat of Gram-positive pathogenic bacteria, particularly those displaying multidrug resistance. However, large-scale production and purification of endolysins is frequently impaired due to their low solubility. In addition, a large number of endolysins appear to exhibit reduced lytic efficacy when compared with their action during phage infection. Here, we took advantage of the high solubility of two recently characterized enterococcal endolysins to construct chimeras targeting Staphylococcus aureus. The putative cell wall binding domain of these endolysins was substituted by that of a staphylococcal endolysin that showed poor solubility. Under appropriate conditions the resulting chimeras presented the high solubility of the parental enterococcal endolysins. In addition, they proved to be broadly active against a collection of the most relevant methicillin-resistant S. aureus epidemic clones and against other Gram-positive pathogens. Thus, fusion of endolysin domains of heterologous origin seems to be a suitable approach to design new potent endolysins with changed and/or extended lytic spectrum that are amenable to large-scale production.
Wound Repair and Regeneration | 2013
João J. Mendes; Clara Leandro; Sofia Corte-Real; Raquel Barbosa; Patrícia Cavaco-Silva; José Melo-Cristino; Andrzej Górski; Miguel Garcia
Chronic wounds that fail to heal are a common complication of diabetes mellitus and the most common precipitating reason for nontraumatic lower limb amputation. Unfortunately, the bacterial species that cause these infections are becoming more resistant to antibiotics, making them increasingly difficult to treat. We assessed the feasibility of combating chronic bacterial infections with a topically delivered bacteriophage cocktail in two animal models of diabetes mellitus. Microbiological, planimetric, and histological parameters were compared in debrided infected wounds with or without topical bacteriophage treatment. We determined that bacteriophage treatment effectively decreased bacterial colony counts and improved wound healing, as indicated by smaller epithelial and dermal gaps, in Staphylococcus aureus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa infections but was not as effective against Acinetobacter baumannii. Although the improvements were more significant in the rodent model than in the porcine model, our results suggest that topically administered bacteriophage treatment may be effective in resolving chronic infections, especially when applied in conjunction with wound debridement. These findings have important implications for the feasibility of using topical antimicrobial therapies to safely treat chronic infections in diabetes mellitus patients.
Journal of Medical Microbiology | 2014
João J. Mendes; Clara Leandro; Carla Mottola; Raquel Barbosa; Filipa Maria Rodrigues Pardal Dias Antunes Marcal Da Silva; Manuela Oliveira; Cristina Lobo Vilela; José Melo-Cristino; Andrzej Górski; Madalena Pimentel; Carlos São-José; Patrícia Cavaco-Silva; Miguel Garcia
In patients with diabetes mellitus, foot infections pose a significant risk. These are complex infections commonly caused by Staphylococcus aureus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Acinetobacter baumannii, all of which are potentially susceptible to bacteriophages. Here, we characterized five bacteriophages that we had determined previously to have antimicrobial and wound-healing potential in chronic S. aureus, P. aeruginosa and A. baumannii infections. Morphological and genetic features indicated that the bacteriophages were lytic members of the family Myoviridae or Podoviridae and did not harbour any known bacterial virulence genes. Combinations of the bacteriophages had broad host ranges for the different target bacterial species. The activity of the bacteriophages against planktonic cells revealed effective, early killing at 4 h, followed by bacterial regrowth to pre-treatment levels by 24 h. Using metabolic activity as a measure of cell viability within established biofilms, we found significant cell impairment following bacteriophage exposure. Repeated treatment every 4 h caused a further decrease in cell activity. The greatest effects on both planktonic and biofilm cells occurred at a bacteriophage : bacterium input multiplicity of 10. These studies on both planktonic cells and established biofilms allowed us to better evaluate the effects of a high input multiplicity and a multiple-dose treatment protocol, and the findings support further clinical development of bacteriophage therapy.
Molecular Microbiology | 2015
Daniela Proença; Christophe Velours; Clara Leandro; Miguel Garcia; Madalena Pimentel; Carlos São-José
Bacteriophage endolysins are bacterial cell wall degrading enzymes whose potential to fight bacterial infections has been intensively studied. Endolysins from Gram‐positive systems are typically described as monomeric and as having a modular structure consisting of one or two N‐terminal catalytic domains (CDs) linked to a C‐terminal region responsible for cell wall binding (CWB). We show here that expression of the endolysin gene lys170 of the enterococcal phage F170/08 results in two products, the expected full length endolysin (Lys170FL) and a C‐terminal fragment corresponding to the CWB domain (CWB170). The latter is produced from an in‐frame, alternative translation start site. Both polypeptides interact to form the fully active endolysin. Biochemical data strongly support a model where Lys170 is made of one monomer of Lys170FL associated with up to three CWB170 subunits, which are responsible for efficient endolysin binding to its substrate. Bioinformatics analysis indicates that similar secondary translation start signals may be used to produce and add independent CWB170‐like subunits to different enzymatic specificities. The particular configuration of endolysin Lys170 uncovers a new mode of increasing the number of CWB motifs associated to CD modules, as an alternative to the tandem repetition typically found in monomeric cell wall hydrolases.
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2015
Daniela Proença; Clara Leandro; Miguel Garcia; Madalena Pimentel; Carlos São-José
Bacteriophage lytic enzymes, either endolysins or virion-associated lysins, have been receiving considerable attention as potential antibacterial agents, particularly for the combat of antibiotic-resistant Gram-positive pathogens. A conclusion that easily emerges from the careful analysis of a great number of reports on the field is that the activity of phage lytic enzymes is rarely studied in conditions that support robust growth of the target bacteria. Here, we report the construction and study of a chimerical lysin, EC300, which was designed to target and kill Enterococcus faecalis in conditions supporting vigorous bacterial growth. EC300 resulted from the fusion of a predicted M23 endopeptidase domain of a virion-associated lysin to the putative cell wall binding domain of a previously characterized amidase endolysin, both produced by the E. faecalis phage F170/08. This bacteriolysin-like protein exhibited a clear enhanced lytic activity over the parental endolysin when both were assayed in a rich bacterial growth medium. We demonstrate the killing efficacy of EC300 against growing cells of a panel of typed E. faecalis clinical strains with high level of antibiotic resistance. The possible reasons for the marked difference between the lytic performance of EC300 and that of the amidase are discussed.
Microbial Drug Resistance | 2012
Daniela Proença; Sofia Fernandes; Clara Leandro; Filipa Maria Rodrigues Pardal Dias Antunes Marcal Da Silva; Sofia Santos; Fátima Lopes; R. Mato; Patrícia Cavaco-Silva; Madalena Pimentel; Carlos São-José
Comparative Medicine | 2012
João J. Mendes; Clara Leandro; Dolores P Bonaparte; Andreia L Pinto
Archive | 2018
Sofia Corte-Real; Miguel Ângelo Costa Garcia; Clara Leandro; Ana Raquel Martins Barbosa
Archive | 2017
Miguel Garcia; Carlos Jorge Sousa De Sao Jose; Clara Leandro; Filipa Maria Rodrigues Pardal Dias Antunes Marcal Da Silva; Sara Lourenço
Archive | 2017
Miguel Garcia; Carlos Jorge Sousa De Sao Jose; Clara Leandro; Filipa Maria Rodrigues Pardal Dias Antunes Marcal Da Silva; Ana Raquel Martins Barbosa