COSMETIC USE OF ENGINEERED POSTBIOTICS COMPRISING BACTERIOCINS AND/OR ENDOLYSINS
20230218505 · 2023-07-13
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61K8/99
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61K38/47
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A61K38/16
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61K38/47
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
The present invention concerns a method for the cosmetic caring of the skin and/or mucosa, comprising applying a postbiotic composition comprising at least one postbiotic and at least one bacteriocin and/or endolysin, wherein said postbiotic is preferably a bacterial lysate preferably obtained from bacteria heterologously expressing said at least one bacteriocin and/or endolysin and wherein said postbiotic and said at least one bacteriocin and/or endolysin have a synergistic effect in the cosmetic caring method.
Claims
1-27. (canceled)
28. A method for killing unfavorable bacteria on a healthy skin and/or mucosa of a subject, comprising applying on said healthy skin and/or mucosa of said subject an engineered postbiotic composition comprising a microbial lysate and lysostaphin, wherein said microbial lysate and said lysostaphin have a synergistic effect in killing unfavorable bacteria on said healthy skin and/or mucosa of said subject.
29. The method according to claim 28, wherein said microbial lysate is obtained from GRAS and/or probiotic bacteria.
30. The method according to claim 28, wherein said microbial lysate is obtained from bacteria isolated from a subject.
31. The method according to claim 28, wherein said microbial lysate is obtained from Lactobacillus rhamnosus bacteria.
32. The method according to claim 28, wherein said microbial lysate is obtained from bacteria which do not comprise any antibiotic resistance marker.
33. The method according to claim 28, wherein said postbiotic composition comprises at least two different bacteriocins and/or endolysins.
34. The method according to claim 33, wherein said at least two different bacteriocins and/or endolysins target the same bacterial species.
35. The method according to claim 33, wherein said at least two different bacteriocins and/or endolysins target different bacterial species.
36. The method according to claim 28, wherein said engineered postbiotic composition stimulates growth of at least one commensal bacterial species of the subject.
37. The method according to claim 36, wherein said engineered postbiotic composition stimulates growth of at least one commensal bacterial species of the subject and said lysostaphin targets at least one unfavorable bacterial species.
38. A method for the care of sensitive, sensitized, fragile and/or weakened skin and/or mucosa, wherein an engineered postbiotic composition is applied on said sensitive, sensitized, fragile and/or weakened skin and/or mucosa, wherein said engineered postbiotic composition comprises a microbial lysate and lysostaphin, wherein said microbial lysate and said lysostaphin have a synergistic effect in killing unfavorable bacteria on said sensitive, sensitized, fragile and/or weakened skin and/or mucosa of said subject.
39. The method according to claim 38, for the care of unaesthetic and/or unpleasant and/or uncomfortable manifestations of sensitive, sensitized, fragile and/or weakened skin and/or mucosa, wherein said engineered postbiotic is applied on the skin and/or mucosa of a subject with unaesthetic and/or unpleasant and/or uncomfortable manifestations of sensitive, sensitized, fragile and/or weakened skin and/or mucosa.
40. The method according to claim 38, wherein the unaesthetic and/or unpleasant and/or uncomfortable manifestations of sensitive, sensitized, fragile and/or weakened skin and/or mucosa are chosen from the feeling of heat or warmth or tension, tingling, stinging, tightness, itching, pruritus, dry patches, erythema, redness and a mixture of these manifestations.
41. The method according to claim 28, for controlling and/or reducing body odor, wherein said engineered postbiotic composition is applied on the skin of the feet or the skin of the armpits.
42. The method according to claim 28, wherein said engineered postbiotic composition is in the form of a cosmetic formulation for topical application.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0184] FIG. 1: Lysostaphin expression plasmid. p1016 plasmid map with His tagged lysostaphin expressed from PorfX IP-673 inducible promoter. Plasmid backbone contains pWV01 origin of replication and an erythromycin resistance marker (ermB).
[0185] FIG. 2: Lysolysate killing activity on S. aureus. Measurement of S. aureus turbidity reduction with time when mixing S. aureus Newman strain with L. rhamnosus lysolysate produced from lysed culture of L. rhamnosus GG LrOs11721+ p1016 expressing lysostaphin and concentrated 40× in 20 mM acetate buffer pH 5. L. rhamnosus GG LrOs11721 lysate was used as control and L. rhamnosus GG LrOs11721 lysates spiked with lysostaphin (1 and 4 μg/mL final concentration) as references.
[0186] FIG. 3: Lysolysate specific and efficient killing of S. aureus. Log reduction (−log10 (Final CFU/Initial CFU)) in S. aureus and other staphylococcal strains after 1 hour incubation with lysolysate.
[0187] FIGS. 4-5: Synergistic effect of lysostaphin and bacterial lysates. FIG. 4: Measurement of S. aureus turbidity reduction with time for L. rhamnosus GG lysate (concentrated 40×) and 20 mM acetate buffer pH 5 with or without lysostaphin (1 μg/mL). Time to reduce by half initial absorbance (IC50) is lower for Lysostaphin in lysate compared to Lysostaphin in acetate buffer. Lysate and acetate buffer in absence of Lysostaphin have identical 1050. FIG. 5: Measurement of S. aureus CFU reduction with time for L. rhamnosus GG lysate (concentrated 40×) and 20 mM acetate buffer pH 5 with or without Lysostaphin (1 μg/mL)
[0188] FIG. 6: Effect of lysate concentration on synergy. Measurement of S. aureus turbidity reduction with time for different concentrations of L. rhamnosus GG lysate (4×, 0.4×, 0.04×, 0.004× 0.0004×) supplemented with Lysostaphin (1 μg/mL final concentration). Below a given concentration of lysate (between 0.004× and 0.0004×) the Lysostaphin killing activity is equivalent or lower than the same Lysostaphin concentration in acetate buffer.
[0189] FIG. 7: Synergy effect on different bacterial strains. Measurements of S. aureus killing efficiency (1/IC50) for different bacterial lysates spiked with different concentrations of lysostaphin. A higher killing efficiency in bacterial lysate than in acetate buffer adjusted at equivalent pH is observed.
[0190] FIG. 8: Effect of molecular crowding on lysostaphin activity in acetate buffer. Measurements of S. aureus turbidity reduction in acetate buffer pH 5 with lysostaphin 4 μg/mL, supplemented with different concentrations of Bovine Serum Albumin (BSA) to increase molecular crowding, show a reduction in lysostaphin activity with higher molecular crowding.
[0191] FIG. 9: Stimulation of S. epidermidis growth by L. rhamnosus lysate. Growth curve of S. epidermidis in diluted TSB (12.5% v/v) supplemented with 20 mM acetate buffer pH 5 or L. rhamnosus GG lysate
[0192] FIG. 10: Clinical protocol to evaluate soothing effect after skin stripping. At T-1 Redness parameter is measured using a colorimeter, tape stripping is performed several times to remove superficial layers of the skin and induce an increase in skin redness. Lysate is applied and as a placebo the 20 mM acetate buffer pH 5. Just after application the redness is measured at different time points. During this time the healthy volunteer is kept in a controlled environment with constant relative humidity and temperature.
[0193] FIG. 11: Soothing effect of L. rhamnosus lysate. Mean percentage variation of redness after skin stripping (T0) on skin area treated with L. rhamnosus GG lysate or with 20 mM acetate buffer pH 5 (NaOAc). Paired t-test shows significant difference (p-value<0.0001) between both treatments at T=30, 60 and 120 min. % variation of redness=(skin redness T-skin redness T0)/skin redness T0.
EXAMPLES
[0194] In the present examples, the inventors developed engineered postbiotics suitable to tackle causes, symptoms and recurrence of unaesthetic manifestations of skin dysbiosis due to the growth of S. aureus, and demonstrated: [0195] a S. aureus specific killing activity based on a lysate containing Lysostaphin, [0196] a synergistic increase in Lysostaphin killing activity in presence of bacterial lysate, [0197] a beneficial effect on host commensal microbiota, and [0198] a soothing effect on irritated skin after skin tape-stripping
[0199] As a proof of principle, probiotic strain L. rhamnosus GG (LrOs11721) was engineered to express, in the cytoplasm, lysostaphin, a bacteriocin with high specificity for S. aureus. Lysostaphin was cloned on a plasmid (FIG. 1) under the control of the sakacin inducible promoter PorfX (Sørvig et al. (2005) Microbiology (Reading, England) 151:2439-2449) and transformed into L. rhamnosus. Transformants were grown, lysostaphin expression was induced at mid-log phase and cells were harvested at high density (OD˜1). Bacterial cells were concentrated 40× in 20 mM acetate buffer pH 5 by centrifugation before being lysed mechanically and filtered sterilized leading to a lysate (herein called lysolysate) containing both L. rhamnosus cell components and Lysostaphin.
EXAMPLE 1
S. aureus Specific Killing Using a L. rhamnosus Lysolysate
[0200] In order to check the staphylolytic activity of the lysolysate, a turbidity reduction experiment was performed using S. aureus Newman strain mixed with lysolysate (FIG. 2). As shown in FIG. 2, a rapid decrease of the S. aureus population, as measured by absorbance at 600 nm, can be observed in presence of the lysolysate. No decrease in absorbance was observed when S. aureus cells were put in presence of the L. rhamnosus lysate indicating that the expressed Lysostaphin is responsible for the turbidity reduction and so the staphylolytic activity. Inventors decided to test the lysolysate killing specificity towards S. aureus.
[0201] Specificity of endolysin is generally at the genus level meaning that for example staphylococcal endolysins are able to kill both non-commensal species such as S. aureus but also commensal species such as S. epidermidis. Unlike endolysins, lysostaphin has been shown to be specifically targeting S. aureus and show a much lower activity against other Staphylococcal species such as S. epidermidis. To test if the Lysostaphin-containing L. rhamnosus lysate has also a high S. aureus specificity, a killing assay was performed (FIG. 3) using lysolysate in presence of both Coagulase positive strains (CoPS) among which 75 S. aureus strains and Coagulase negative strains (CoNS) among which 35 S. epidermidis strains. An average of 4.58 log reduction was obtained for S. aureus strains against a 1.54 log reduction obtained against the 35 S. epidermidis strains. Thus lysolysate shows a high specificity towards S. aureus species.
[0202] To quantify the effect of the bacterial lysate on lysostaphin activity, a turbidity reduction experiment and a CFU experiment were performed (FIG. 4-5). The IC50, time to decrease initial OD by half, was measured for the L. rhamnosus lysate alone, 20 μg/ml of purified Lysostaphin (Sigma reference L9043) resuspended in 20 mM acetate buffer pH 5 (NaOAc) buffer and 20 μg/ml of purified Lysostaphin resuspended in L. rhamnosus lysate. Surprisingly, the inventors observed a higher turbidity reduction (lower IC50) and a faster decrease in CFU for the Lysostaphin in lysate compared to Lysostaphin in acetate buffer. No difference in absorbance or CFU counts were measured between L. rhamnosus lysate and acetate buffer indicating that there is no activity of the L. rhamnosus lysate alone and the improvement of Lysostaphin activity in lysate is not the result of an additive effect of Lysostaphin activity and L. rhamnosus lysate activity but rather a synergistic effect of the lysate on the Lysostaphin activity. Such synergistic effect of Lysostaphin and bacterial lysate has not been documented and offer an advantageous and non-obvious effect for the killing of S. aureus with lysolysate compare to Lysostaphin alone.
[0203] This synergistic effect between Lysostaphin and the L. rhamnosus lysate was observed for different concentrations of lysate (FIG. 6) and for different concentrations of Lysostaphin (FIG. 7).
[0204] To test if this effect was specific of L. rhamnosus lysate, S. aureus killing activity of Lysostaphin mixed with lysates from different bacteria (Lactobacillus plantarum and Escherichia coli) was measured. Synergistic effect was observed for both Lactobacillus plantarum and E. coli even if at high Lysostaphin concentration (60 μg/ml) E. coli lysate killing activity was similar to the activity in buffer (FIG. 7).
[0205] The inventors also tested if the pH of the lysate could explain this synergy as it is known that acidic pH is not optimum for Lysostaphin activity. Lysate from L. rhamnosus , L. plantarum and E. coli were respectively pH 6.8, 6.2, 6.2. S. aureus bactericidal activity was measured for different concentrations of Lysostaphin in acetate buffer with equivalent pH (6.2 and 6.8). A higher killing was still observed for the lysate compared to buffer at same pH (FIG. 7) indicating that the pH cannot explain the synergy observed.
[0206] One difference between Lysostaphin in acetate buffer and Lysostaphin in lysate is the presence of a large amount of proteins and other cellular molecules that might provide a high molecular crowding environment for Lysostaphin to act. In order to test if molecular crowding could explain the increased activity of Lysostaphin in bacterial lysate the inventors performed a turbidity reduction experiment in presence of increasing concentrations of Bovine Serum Albumin (BSA) (FIG. 8). All concentrations of BSA led to a slower decrease in turbidity indicating a lower Lysostaphin activity. Thus molecular crowding does not seem to explain the synergy effect observed between lysate and Lysostaphin.
[0207] The inventors have shown that a lysolysate, produced from the lysis of L. rhamnosus bacterial cells heterologously expressing cytoplasmic Lysostaphin, allows highly efficient and specific killing of S. aureus strains. Surprisingly inventors demonstrated a synergistic effect between Lysostaphin and L. rhamnosus lysate increasing Lysotaphin killing activity. This synergistic effect is not specific to L. rhamnosus lysate and depends on the lysate concentration.
Materials and Methods:
Bacterial Strains:
[0208] L. plantarum s15998 was isolated from fermented cabbage. Lysolysate was produced from strain s18195 (L. rhamnosus +p1016).
Production of Bacterial Lysates:
[0209] Overnight cultures of L. plantarum s15998 was inoculated from cryostock in 50 mL of MRS (NutriSelect Merck) and incubated in anaerobic conditions at 37° C. Overnight culture of L. rhamnosus was inoculated from cryostock in 50 mL of SPY2 (Heenan, C. N., et al.(2002). Lwt-Food Sci Technology 35, 171-176) and incubated in anaerobic conditions at 37° C. Overnight culture of E. coli K-12 MG1655 liquid culture was grown in LB (Difco) and incubated overnight in aerobic conditions at 37° C.
[0210] Overnight cultures were diluted 1/10 in 500 mL of the appropriate media pre-reduced in anaerobic conditions and incubated at 37° C. in anaerobic conditions except for E. coli that was incubated at 37° C. in aerobic conditions. At OD600 nm≈[1-2], bacterial cultures were put on ice, and following steps were performed at 4° C. First cells were washed twice in deionized water using centrifugation and finally resuspended in 12.5 mL of 20 mM acetate buffer pH 5 (40× concentration of the initial cell culture). The concentrated culture was then lysed using bead beating at 30 Hz for 2 cycles of 20 minutes, placing the sample on ice for 2 minutes in between cycles. Bacterial lysate was centrifuged for 10 min at 10 000 g and supernatant was then filtered (0.4 μm) and stored at 4° C. CFU was performed before and after bead beating treatment to measure lysis efficiency.
Production of Lysolysate:
[0211] Overnight culture of L. rhamnosus+p1016 was inoculated from cryostock in 50 mL of SPY2 medium (Heenan, C. N., et al. (2002). Lwt-Food Sci Technology 35, 171-176) with erythromycin at final concentration 5 μg/mL and incubated in anaerobic conditions at 37° C. Overnight culture was diluted 1/10 in 500 mL of SPY2 medium pre-reduced in anaerobic conditions and incubated at 37° C. in anaerobic conditions. At OD.sub.600nm=0.3 the culture was induced with 200 ng/mL of inducing peptide IP-673 (Novopro Cat. #: 300935) and incubated at 37° C. until OD.sub.600nm=1.0. Bacterial culture was put on ice, and every following step was performed at 4° C. First cells were washed twice in deionized water using centrifugation and finally resuspended in 12.5 mL of 20 mM acetate buffer pH 5 (40× concentration of the initial cell culture). The concentrated culture was then lysed using bead beating at 30 Hz for 2 cycles of 20 minutes, placing the sample on ice for 2 minutes in between cycles. Bacterial lysate was centrifuged for 10 min at 10 000 g and supernatant was then filtered (0.4 μm) and stored at 4° C. Measure of CFU was performed before and after bead beating treatment to measure lysis efficiency.
Turbidity Reduction Experiment:
[0212] Overnight culture of S. aureus strain Newman was inoculated from an isolated colony in 15 mL of TSB (Tryptic Soy Broth, Difco) and incubated at 37° C., aerobically. Overnight culture was diluted 1/100 in a final volume of 1.5 L of TSB and incubated aerobically at 37° C. At OD600 nm=1 culture was washed twice with deionised water at 4° C., centrifuged at 4° C., 4000 g for 10 minutes, resuspended in 7.5 mL of 1× PBS (Phosphate Buffered Saline, Fisher BioReagents, pH 7.4) and finally frozen as 500 μL aliquots at −20° C.
[0213] Bacterial suspension for the turbidity reduction assay was prepared from an aliquot of the frozen stock of S. aureus strain Newman. Lysostaphin solution and bacterial suspension were mixed in a ratio 1:10 in duplicates in a 96-well plate (Microlon 200, transparent, flat bottom) final volume 200 μL and absorbance at 600 nm (Tecan Infinite 200 pro) was measured every 1.3 minutes, at 37° C. without agitation for 1 hour.
EXAMPLE 2
Beneficial Effect of Lysate on Skin Microbiota
[0214] The approach of the inventors aims at killing specifically S. aureus, as shown in example 1, but also helping the skin commensal bacteria to restore homeostasis by helping them grow and occupe the niche left empty from S. aureus decolonization.
[0215] To test such an effect, the inventors investigated the effect of the lysate on the growth of S. epidermidis (FIG. 9). S. epidermidis (ATCC® 12228TM) was grown in poor nutrient conditions supplemented or not with L. rhamnosus lysate and cell density was followed by absorbance using OD600 nm. S. epidermidis shows a higher growth rate and final density in presence of L. rhamnosus lysate compared to buffer indicating a beneficial effect of the lysate on S. epidermidis.
Materials and Methods:
[0216] Production of L. rhamnosus Lysate:
[0217] Overnight culture of L. rhamnosus was inoculated from cryostock in 50 mL of SPY2 (Heenan, C. N., et al. (2002). Lwt-Food Sci Technology 35, 171-176) and incubated in anaerobic conditions at 37° C. Overnight culture was diluted 1/10 in 500 mL of the appropriate media pre-reduced in anaerobic conditions and incubated at 37° C. in anaerobic conditions. At OD600 nm≈1, bacterial culture was put on ice, and following steps were performed at 4° C. First cells were washed twice in deionized water using centrifugation and finally resuspended in 12.5 mL of 20 mM acetate buffer pH 5 (40× concentration of the initial cell culture). The concentrated culture was then lysed using bead beating at 30 Hz for 2 cycles of 20 minutes, placing the sample on ice for 2 minutes in between cycles. Bacterial lysate was centrifuged for 10 min at 10 000 g and supernatant was then filtered (0.4 μm) and stored at 4° C. CFU was performed before and after bead beating treatment to measure lysis efficiency.
Growth Curve Experiment:
[0218] A preculture of S. epidermidis (ATCC® 12228TM) was inoculated from cryostock into 5 mL TSB and incubated at 37° C. overnight. Overnight culture was resuspended, normalised to OD.sub.600nm=1 and diluted 1/10 in 12.5% (v/v) TSB. In a 96 well plate, 180 μL of normalized bacterial culture was supplemented with 20 μL of L. rhamnosus lysate or 20 μL of 20 mM acetate buffer pH 5. Absorbance at 600 nm (Tecan Infinite 200 pro) was measured every 10 minutes, at 37° C. with agitation for a total of 6.8 hours.
EXAMPLE 3
L. rhamnosus Lysate is Non-Irritating and has Soothing Effect
[0219] Soothing effect of L. rhamnosus lysate on the skin of healthy volunteers submitted to mechanical stress via skin stripping was tested.
[0220] First a test was performed to test the irritating potential of the bacterial lysate. Briefly, three different L. rhamnosus lysate concentrations were put in contact with the skin of healthy volunteers during 48 hours. After 48 hours, L. rhamnosus lysates were removed from skin and skin reaction (erythema and oedema) was evaluated by a dermatologist 15 minutes, 1 hour and 24 hours after removal. These evaluations showed that the three different concentrations of L. rhamnosus lysate were non-irritating according to the amended Draize classification.
[0221] To measure the soothing effect of the L. rhamnosus lysate, a mechanical stress was applied on the skin forearm of 20 volunteers by removing superficial layers of the skin (FIG. 10). Following skin stripping, the bacterial lysate and a placebo (20 mM acetate buffer pH 5) were applied in different treated zones. Redness of skin prior skin stripping (T-1), just after skin stripping (T0) and 30 min, 60 min, and 120 min after lysate and placebo applications was followed. A significant decrease in redness at all time after application (paired t-test p-value<0.0001 at T=30 min, T=60 min, T=120 min) was measured for L. rhamnosus lysate compared to the placebo control indicating a soothing effect of the L. rhamnosus lysate (FIG. 11).
Materials and Methods:
[0222] Production of L. rhamnosus lysate: 2L of L. rhamnosus culture was grown in MRS until OD600 nm=5,8. Centrifugation was performed at 10 000 g for 15 min and cells were resuspended in 200 mL of acetate buffer pH 5.
Cohort Recruitment for Skin Irritation Potential Test:
[0223] 10 healthy female volunteers between 18 and 70 years old were informed about test purposes and were recruited under the supervision of a dermatologist.
Skin Irritation Potential Test:
[0224] The lysate was applied as it is using a Finn Chamber fixed to the skin with a tape already been tested for its safety to ensure the occlusive application of the product. The lysate was left in contact with the skin surface for 48 hours. The cutaneous reactions were analysed 15 minutes, one hour and 24 hours after Finn Chamber removal. A Finn Chamber containing a blotting paper disk soaked with demineralized water was applied and used as a negative control. For each experimental time, erythema reaction and oedema reaction were evaluated and their mean value combined to calculate a Mean Irritation Index (IIM) according to the amended Draize classification.
Cohort Recruitment for Skin Stripping Test:
[0225] 20 healthy female volunteers between 18 and 70 years old were informed about test purposes and were recruited under the supervision of a dermatologist.
Skin Stripping Test:
[0226] 4 skin areas on the volar surface of the forearms of each subject were stripped in order to induce transient and not harmful increase of skin redness. The skin stripping procedure consists in removing serial layers of stratum corneum by standardized repeated applications of adhesive tapes to the skin's surface. L. rhamnosus lysate was applied in one of the 4 surfaces and as a placebo the 20 mM acetate buffer pH 5 was also applied in another of the 4 surfaces. Skin redness was measured, using a colorimeter, at baseline (T-1, before stripping procedure), after stripping procedure (T0) and 30, 60 and 120 minutes after the single product applications.
Percentage variation=(skin redness T−skin redness T0)/skin redness T0.
[0227] In conclusion the engineered postbiotics of the present invention show multiple activities that once combined on human skin should help resolve dysbiosis-induced unaesthetic manifestations and reach homeostasis faster by: [0228] killing specifically the most frequent aetiological agent that is S. aureus, without affecting the commensal skin population, [0229] stimulating growth of commensal skin population such as S. epidermidis, and [0230] having a soothing effect on the skin.
[0231] Some of these activities should act synergistically to address dysbiosis-induced unaesthetic manifestations.