Penetration of antibiotics into bovine neutrophils and their activity against intracellular Staphylococcus aureus
- PMID: 2599995
- DOI: 10.1093/jac/24.5.709
Penetration of antibiotics into bovine neutrophils and their activity against intracellular Staphylococcus aureus
Abstract
The penetration of three antibiotics, penicillin, chloramphenicol and erythromycin into bovine neutrophils, either alone or containing previously ingested Staphylococcus aureus, was determined, and their intracellular activity against these bacteria was measured. Uptake of radiolabelled antibiotics was assessed by rapidly separating neutrophils from extracellular antibiotic by centrifugation through silicone oil. Intracellular activity was estimated by comparing the numbers of bacteria surviving intracellularly in neutrophils exposed to antibiotic for 3 h at ten times the MBC, with those surviving intracellularly in untreated neutrophils. Penicillin was slightly concentrated within the neutrophils, reaching a maximum intracellular concentration 1.75 times that of the extracellular concentration; this is the C/E ratio. Chloramphenicol entered to a greater extent with a maximum C/E ratio of 7.08. Erythromycin became highly concentrated within the neutrophils with a C/E ratio of 11.46 after 90 min incubation. The presence of ingested staphylococci significantly reduced the uptake of chloramphenicol, but had no significant effect on the penetration of the other antibiotics. Intracellular activity studies indicated that, at ten times MBC, only penicillin had any significant activity against intracellular staphylococci, reducing survival by 28%. This work demonstrates that penetration of certain antibiotics can be altered by the presence of ingested staphylococci and that high intracellular levels of antibiotics do not necessarily ensure good intracellular activity against pathogenic micro-organisms.
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