Helicobacter pylori Accumulates Photoactive Porphyrins and Is Killed by Visible Light

MR Hamblin, J Viveiros, C Yang… - Antimicrobial agents …, 2005 - Am Soc Microbiol
MR Hamblin, J Viveiros, C Yang, A Ahmadi, RA Ganz, MJ Tolkoff
Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 2005Am Soc Microbiol
Helicobacter pylori colonizes the mucus layer of the human stomach and duodenum, causes
chronic gastritis, gastric ulcer, and is a risk factor for gastric adenocarcinoma. There is a 20%
failure rate in antibiotic therapy, which is increasingly due to antibiotic resistance and
necessitates the search for alternative antimicrobial methods. We have discovered that H.
pylori when cultured in liquid medium, accumulates significant quantities of coproporphyrin
and protoporphyrin IX, both in the cells and secreted into the medium. These photoactive …
Abstract
Helicobacter pylori colonizes the mucus layer of the human stomach and duodenum, causes chronic gastritis, gastric ulcer, and is a risk factor for gastric adenocarcinoma. There is a 20% failure rate in antibiotic therapy, which is increasingly due to antibiotic resistance and necessitates the search for alternative antimicrobial methods. We have discovered that H. pylori when cultured in liquid medium, accumulates significant quantities of coproporphyrin and protoporphyrin IX, both in the cells and secreted into the medium. These photoactive porphyrins lead to cell death (up to 5 logs) by photodynamic action upon illumination with low doses of visible light, with blue/violet light being most efficient. The degree of killing increases with the age of the culture and is greater than that found with Propionibacterium acnes (another bacterium known to be photosensitive due to porphyrin accumulation). Both virulent and drug-resistant strains are killed. The data suggest that phototherapy might be used to treat H. pylori infection in the human stomach.
American Society for Microbiology