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Top-Down Characterisation of an Antimicrobial Sanitiser, Leading from Quenchers of Efficacy to Mode of Action

Wohlgemuth, Franziska; Gomes, Rachel L.; Singleton, Ian; Rawson, Frankie J.; Avery, Simon V.

Authors

Franziska Wohlgemuth

Rachel L. Gomes

Frankie J. Rawson

Simon V. Avery



Abstract

We developed a top-down strategy to characterise an antimicrobial, oxidising sanitiser, which has diverse proposed applications including surface-sanitisation of fresh foods, and with benefits for water resilience. The strategy involved finding quenchers of antimicrobial activity then antimicrobial mode of action, by identifying key chemical reaction partners starting from complex matrices, narrowing down reactivity to specific organic molecules within cells. The sanitiser electrolysed-water (EW) retained partial fungicidal activity against the food-spoilage fungus Aspergillus niger at high levels of added soils (30–750 mg mL-1), commonly associated with harvested produce. Soil with high organic load (approx. 98 mg g-1) gave stronger EW inactivation. Marked inactivation by a complex organics mix (YEPD medium) was linked to its protein-rich components. Addition of pure proteins or amino acids (≤1 mg mL-1) fully suppressed EW activity. Mechanism was interrogated further with the yeast model, corroborating marked suppression of EW action by the amino acid methionine. Pre-culture with methionine increased resistance to EW, sodium hypochlorite, or chlorine-free ozonated water. Overexpression of methionine sulfoxide reductases (which reduce oxidised methionine) protected against EW. Fluoroprobe-based analyses indicated that methionine and cysteine inactivate free chlorine species in EW. Intracellular methionine oxidation can disturb cellular FeS-clusters and we showed that EW treatment impairs FeS-enzyme activity. The study establishes the value of a top-down approach for multi-level characterisation of sanitiser efficacy and action. The results reveal proteins and amino acids as key quenchers of EW activity and, among the amino acids, the importance of methionine oxidation and FeS-cluster damage for antimicrobial mode-of-action.

Citation

Wohlgemuth, F., Gomes, R. L., Singleton, I., Rawson, F. J., & Avery, S. V. (2020). Top-Down Characterisation of an Antimicrobial Sanitiser, Leading from Quenchers of Efficacy to Mode of Action. Frontiers in Microbiology, 11, Article 575157. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.575157

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Sep 7, 2020
Online Publication Date Sep 25, 2020
Publication Date Sep 25, 2020
Deposit Date Sep 25, 2020
Publicly Available Date Sep 25, 2020
Publisher Frontiers Media
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 11
Article Number 575157
DOI https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.575157
Keywords antimicrobial sanitiser, mode of action, Oxidative Stress, Methionine, Fungi, yeast, Soil organics
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/2686634

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Top-Down Characterisation Of An Antimicrobial Sanitiser, Leading From Quenchers Of Efficacy To Mode Of Action (2.4 Mb)
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Publisher Licence URL
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Copyright Statement
© 2020 Wohlgemuth, Gomes, Singleton, Rawson and Avery. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY).




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