Patent · US Expired

Method for selectively inhibiting the growth of microbes using a haloperoxidase-halide-peroxide system

US5888505A · kind A · utility

14Cited by
7References
8Claims
0Family size

Assignee

Inventor

Key dates

Filing dateJun 7, 1995
Grant dateMar 30, 1999
Priority date
Expiry dateJun 7, 2015

Classification

  • Technology area (CPC C)Chemistry; Metallurgy
  • CPC primaryC12Y111/02002
  • WIPO fieldPharmaceuticals
  • WIPO sectorChemistry

Abstract

Haloperoxidases are used to selectively bind to and, in the presence of peroxide and halide, inhibit the growth of target microbes without eliminating desirable microbes or significantly damaging other components, such as host cells, in the environment of the target microbe. When a target microbe, e.g., a pathogenic microbe, has a binding capacity for haloperoxidase greater than that of a desired microbe, e.g., members of the normal flora, the target microbe selectively binds the haloperoxidase with little or no binding of the haloperoxidase by the desired microbe. In the presence of peroxide and halide, the target bound haloperoxidase catalyzes halide oxidation and facilitates the disproportionation of peroxide to singlet molecular oxygen at the surface of the target microbe. The lifetime of singlet molecular oxygen restricts damage to the surface resulting in selective killing of the target microbe with a minimum of collateral damage to the desired microbe or physiological medium. The methods and compositions of the invention are highly useful in the therapeutic or prophylactic antiseptic treatment of human or animal subjects, since their use can be designed to be highly effectiv…

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Objective bibliographic and citation counts.