Author/Authors :
Aziz, Mubashar Department of Pathobiology - Bahauddin Zakariya University - Multan, Pakistan - Department of Microbiology - University of Karachi - Karachi, Pakistan , Garduno, Rafael Department of Microbiology - Dalhousie University - Halifax, Canada , Mirani, Zulfiqar Ali PCSIR Laboratories Complex - Karachi, Pakistan , Baqai, Rakhshanda Department of Microbiology - University of Karachi - Karachi, Pakistan - Departmet of Clinical Microbiology & Immunology - Dadabhoy Institute of Higher Education - Karachi, Pakistan , Sattar Sheikh, Ahsan Institute of Food Science and Nutrition - Bahauddin Zakariya University - Multan, Pakistan , Nazir, Humera Islamic International University, Islamabad , Raza, Yasir Department of Microbiology - University of Karachi - Karachi, Pakistan , Ayaz, Mazhar Department of Pathobiology - Bahauddin Zakariya University - Multan, Pakistan , Urooj Kazmi, Shahana Department of Microbiology - University of Karachi - Karachi, Pakistan - Departmet of Clinical Microbiology & Immunology - Dadabhoy Institute of Higher Education - Karachi, Pakistan
Abstract :
Objective(s): Diabetic foot infection is one of the major complications of diabetes leading to lower limb
amputations. Isolation and identification of bacteria causing diabetic foot infection, determination
of antibiotic resistance, antimicrobial potential of protamine by electron microscopy and SDS-PAGE
analysis, arethe aims of this study.
Materials and Methods: 285 pus samples from diabetic foot infection patients were collected from different
hospitals of Karachi and Capital Health Hospital, Halifax, Canada. Clinical history of each patient was
recorded. Bacterial isolates were cultured on appropriate media; identification was done by morphology,
cultural and biochemical tests. Effect of protamine against multi drug resistant strains of Pseudomona
aeruginosa was checked by minimum inhibitory concentration in 96 well micro-titer plates. The isolates
were grown in bactericidal concentration of protamine on plates to isolate mutants. Effect of protamine on
protein expression was checked by SDS- PAGE and ultra-structural morphological changes by transmission
electron microscopy.
Results: Results indicated prevalence of foot infection as 92% in diabetic patients. Major bacterial
isolates were Staphylococcus aureus 65 (23%), P. aeruginosa 80 (28.1%), Klebsiella spp. 37 (13%),
Proteus mirabilis 79 (27.7%), and Escherichia coli 24 (12%). These isolates were highly resistant
to different antibiotics. MIC value of protamine was 500 μg/ml against P. aeruginosa. SDS-PAGE
analysis revealed that protamine can suppress expression of various virulence proteins and electron
micrographs indicated condensation of cytoplasm and accumulation of protamine in cytoplasm
without damaging the cell membrane.
Conclusion: P. aeruginosa and S. aureus were the major isolates expressing multi-drug resistance and
protamine sulfate represented good antimicrobial potential.
Keywords :
Diabetic foot , Pseudomonas aeruginosa , Protamine , Transmission electron Microscopy , Polyacrylamide gel