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Do salicylates and ascorbate increase the outer membrane permeability to hydrophobic antibiotics in Pseudomonas aeruginosa?

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Do salicylates and ascorbate increase the outer membrane permeability to hydrophobic antibiotics in Pseudomonas aeruginosa?

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Acetylsalicylate and ascorbate have earlier been shown to increase the outer membrane (OM) permeability of Pseudomonas aeruginosa to a hydrophobic probe compound, nitrocefin. In order to elucidate whether these drugs increase the OM permeability to a wider set of hydrophobic compounds, the OM permeability to three other hydrophobic probes (rifampin, fusidic acid and sodium deoxycholate) was studied in the presence of salicylates or ascorbate. A high concentration (300 micrograms/ml, equal to 1.7 mM) of L-ascorbate decreased the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of rifampin against P. aeruginosa by a factor of approximately 3. As a sharp contrast, the reference compound, polymyxin B nonapeptide (PMBN) which has a strong OM permeability-increasing action, decreased the MIC by a factor of approximately 100, at a concentration as low as 3 micrograms/ml (equal to 3 microM). If the assays were performed in a low ionic strength medium (L broth diluted 1/5 with water) instead of L broth,

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