# | Rank | Similarity | Title + Abs. | Year | PMID |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
| 8938 | 0 | 1.0000 | Thioridazine affects transcription of genes involved in cell wall biosynthesis in methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. The antipsychotic drug thioridazine is a candidate drug for an alternative treatment of infections caused by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in combination with the β-lactam antibiotic oxacillin. The drug has been shown to have the capability to resensitize MRSA to oxacillin. We have previously shown that the expression of some resistance genes is abolished after treatment with thioridazine and oxacillin. To further understand the mechanism underlying the reversal of resistance, we tested the expression of genes involved in antibiotic resistance and cell wall biosynthesis in response to thioridazine in combination with oxacillin. We observed that the oxacillin-induced expression of genes belonging to the VraSR regulon is reduced by the addition of thioridazine. The exclusion of such key factors involved in cell wall biosynthesis will most likely lead to a weakened cell wall and affect the ability of the bacteria to sustain oxacillin treatment. Furthermore, we found that thioridazine itself reduces the expression level of selected virulence genes and that selected toxin genes are not induced by thioridazine. In the present study, we find indications that the mechanism underlying reversal of resistance by thioridazine relies on decreased expression of specific genes involved in cell wall biosynthesis. | 2011 | 21375577 |
| 8967 | 1 | 0.9996 | Distinct transcriptomic response of S. coelicolor to ciprofloxacin in a nutrient-rich environment. With the rising threat of anti-microbial resistance (AMR), there is an urgent need to enhance efficacy of existing antibiotics. Understanding the myriad mechanisms through which bacteria evade these drugs would be of immense value to designing novel strategies against them. Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) M145 belongs to the actinomyctes species that are responsible for more than two-thirds of antibiotics. This group of bacteria therefore encodes for various mechanisms that can resist both endogenous and non-endogenous antibiotics. In an earlier study, we had studied the transcriptomic response of these bacteria to ciprofloxacin, when cultured in a minimal media. In this work, we investigate why the minimum inhibitory concentration of the drug increases by fourfold when the bacteria are grown in a nutrient-rich media. Through transcriptomic, biochemical, and microscopic studies, we show that S. coelicolor responds to ciprofloxacin in a concentration-dependent manner. While, sub-inhibitory concentration of the drug primarily causes oxidative stress, the inhibitory concentration of ciprofloxacin evokes a more severe genome-wide response in the cell, which ranges from the familiar upregulation of the SOS response and DNA repair pathways to the widespread alterations in the central metabolism pathway to accommodate the increased needs of nucleotides and other precursors. Further, the upregulation of peptidoglycan synthesis genes, along with microscopy images, suggest alterations in the cell morphology to increase fitness of the bacteria during the antibiotic stress. The data also points to the enhanced efflux activity in cells cultured in rich media that contributes significantly towards reducing intracellular drug concentration and thus promotes survival. | 2018 | 30327831 |
| 8903 | 2 | 0.9996 | Role of the SOS Response in the Generation of Antibiotic Resistance In Vivo. The SOS response to DNA damage is a conserved stress response in Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria. Although this pathway has been studied for years, its relevance is still not familiar to many working in the fields of clinical antibiotic resistance and stewardship. Under some conditions, the SOS response favors DNA repair and preserves the genetic integrity of the organism. On the other hand, the SOS response also includes induction of error-prone DNA polymerases, which can increase the rate of mutation, called the mutator phenotype or "hypermutation." As a result, mutations can occur in genes conferring antibiotic resistance, increasing the acquisition of resistance to antibiotics. Almost all of the work on the SOS response has been on bacteria exposed to stressors in vitro. In this study, we sought to quantitate the effects of SOS-inducing drugs in vivo, in comparison with the same drugs in vitro. We used a rabbit model of intestinal infection with enteropathogenic Escherichia coli strain E22. SOS-inducing drugs triggered the mutator phenotype response in vivo as well as in vitro. Exposure of E. coli strain E22 to ciprofloxacin or zidovudine, both of which induce the SOS response in vitro, resulted in increased antibiotic resistance to 3 antibiotics: rifampin, minocycline, and fosfomycin. Zinc was able to inhibit the SOS-induced emergence of antibiotic resistance in vivo, as previously observed in vitro. Our findings may have relevance in reducing the emergence of resistance to new antimicrobial drugs. | 2021 | 33875437 |
| 4437 | 3 | 0.9996 | The activity of glycopeptide antibiotics against resistant bacteria correlates with their ability to induce the resistance system. Glycopeptide antibiotics containing a hydrophobic substituent display the best activity against vancomycin-resistant enterococci, and they have been assumed to be poor inducers of the resistance system. Using a panel of 26 glycopeptide derivatives and the model resistance system in Streptomyces coelicolor, we confirmed this hypothesis at the level of transcription. Identification of the structural glycopeptide features associated with inducing the expression of resistance genes has important implications in the search for more effective antibiotic structures. | 2014 | 25092694 |
| 8966 | 4 | 0.9996 | Gene expression profile of Campylobacter jejuni in response to macrolide antibiotics. Campylobacter jejuni is a foodborne pathogen that causes gastroenteritis in humans and has developed resistance to various antibiotics. The primary objective of this research was to examine the network of antibiotic resistance in C. jejuni. The study involved the wild and antibiotic-resistant strains placed in the presence and absence of antibiotics to review their gene expression profiles in response to ciprofloxacin via microarray. Differentially expressed genes (DEGs) analysis and Protein-Protein Interaction (PPI) Network studies were performed for these genes. The results showed that the resistance network of C. jejuni is modular, with different genes involved in bacterial motility, capsule synthesis, efflux, and amino acid and sugar synthesis. Antibiotic treatment resulted in the down-regulation of cluster genes related to translation, flagellum formation, and chemotaxis. In contrast, cluster genes involved in homeostasis, capsule formation, and cation efflux were up-regulated. The study also found that macrolide antibiotics inhibit the progression of C. jejuni infection by inactivating topoisomerase enzymes and increasing the activity of epimerase enzymes, trying to compensate for the effect of DNA twisting. Then, the bacterium limits the movement to conserve energy. Identifying the antibiotic resistance network in C. jejuni can aid in developing drugs to combat these bacteria. Genes involved in cell division, capsule formation, and substance transport may be potential targets for inhibitory drugs. Future research must be directed toward comprehending the underlying mechanisms contributing to the modularity of antibiotic resistance and developing strategies to disrupt and mitigate the growing threat of antibiotic resistance effectively. | 2024 | 38393387 |
| 6330 | 5 | 0.9996 | Transcriptomic study of ciprofloxacin resistance in Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2). Soil organisms exhibit resistance to a wide range of antibiotics as they either need to protect themselves from endogenous antibiotics or from those present in their soil environment. The soil could serve as a reservoir for resistance mechanisms that have already emerged or have the potential to emerge in clinically important bacteria. Streptomyces coelicolor, a non-pathogenic soil-dwelling organism, is thus used as a model for the study of intrinsic resistance. Preliminary screening of several compounds showed that S. coelicolor had high intrinsic resistance for the fluoroquinolone group of antibiotics. We subjected the bacteria to sub-inhibitory concentrations of ciprofloxacin and studied the transcriptomic response using microarrays. The data were supported with various biochemical and phenotypic assays. Ciprofloxacin treatment leads to differential expression of many genes with enhanced mRNA expression of its target, DNA gyrase gene. High induction of DNA repair pathways was also observed and many transporters were upregulated. Ciprofloxacin was found to induce ROS formation in a dose dependent manner. Reduction of ROS via anti-oxidants increased the effective MIC of the drug in the bacteria. The regulation of antibiotic resistance in S. coelicolor was studied systematically and contribution of different mechanisms in the development of resistance was assessed. Our data suggest that multiple mechanisms work in coordination to facilitate the cell to combat the stress due to ciprofloxacin. | 2013 | 24100886 |
| 4406 | 6 | 0.9995 | A Screen for Antibiotic Resistance Determinants Reveals a Fitness Cost of the Flagellum in Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The intrinsic resistance of Pseudomonas aeruginosa to many antibiotics limits treatment options for pseudomonal infections. P. aeruginosa's outer membrane is highly impermeable and decreases antibiotic entry into the cell. We used an unbiased high-throughput approach to examine mechanisms underlying outer membrane-mediated antibiotic exclusion. Insertion sequencing (INSeq) identified genes that altered fitness in the presence of linezolid, rifampin, and vancomycin, antibiotics to which P. aeruginosa is intrinsically resistant. We reasoned that resistance to at least one of these antibiotics would depend on outer membrane barrier function, as previously demonstrated in Escherichia coli and Vibrio cholerae This approach demonstrated a critical role of the outer membrane barrier in vancomycin fitness, while efflux pumps were primary contributors to fitness in the presence of linezolid and rifampin. Disruption of flagellar assembly or function was sufficient to confer a fitness advantage to bacteria exposed to vancomycin. These findings clearly show that loss of flagellar function alone can confer a fitness advantage in the presence of an antibiotic.IMPORTANCE The cell envelopes of Gram-negative bacteria render them intrinsically resistant to many classes of antibiotics. We used insertion sequencing to identify genes whose disruption altered the fitness of a highly antibiotic-resistant pathogen, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, in the presence of antibiotics usually excluded by the cell envelope. This screen identified gene products involved in outer membrane biogenesis and homeostasis, respiration, and efflux as important contributors to fitness. An unanticipated fitness cost of flagellar assembly and function in the presence of the glycopeptide antibiotic vancomycin was further characterized. These findings have clinical relevance for individuals with cystic fibrosis who are infected with P. aeruginosa and undergo treatment with vancomycin for a concurrent Staphylococcus aureus infection. | 2020 | 31871033 |
| 9102 | 7 | 0.9995 | An Organogold Compound as Potential Antimicrobial Agent against Drug-Resistant Bacteria: Initial Mechanistic Insights. The rise of antimicrobial resistance has necessitated novel strategies to efficiently combat pathogenic bacteria. Metal-based compounds have been proven as a possible alternative to classical organic drugs. Here, we have assessed the antibacterial activity of seven gold complexes of different families. One compound, a cyclometalated Au(III) C^N complex, showed activity against Gram-positive bacteria, including multi-drug resistant clinical strains. The mechanism of action of this compound was studied in Bacillus subtilis. Overall, the studies point towards a complex mode of antibacterial action, which does not include induction of oxidative stress or cell membrane damage. A number of genes related to metal transport and homeostasis were upregulated upon short treatment of the cells with gold compound. Toxicity tests conducted on precision-cut mouse tissue slices ex vivo revealed that the organogold compound is poorly toxic to mouse liver and kidney tissues, and may thus, be treated as an antibacterial drug candidate. | 2021 | 34181818 |
| 9098 | 8 | 0.9995 | Tricyclic amine antidepressants suppress β-lactam resistance in methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) by repressing mRNA levels of key resistance genes. Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is the leading cause of recurrent infections in humans including endocarditis, pneumonia, and toxic shock syndrome. Novel therapeutics to treat MRSA and other resistant bacteria are urgently needed. Adjuvant therapy, which uses a non-toxic compound to repotentiate the toxic effects of an existing antibiotic, is an attractive response to the growing resistance crisis. Herein, we describe the evaluation of structurally related, FDA-approved tricyclic amine antidepressants that selectively repotentiate MRSA to β-lactam antibiotics. Our results identify important structural features of the tricyclic amine class for β-lactam adjuvant activity. Furthermore, we describe the mechanism of action for our lead compound, amoxapine, and illustrate that it represses the mRNA levels of key β-lactam resistance genes in response to β-lactam treatment. This work is novel in that it highlights an important class of small molecules with the ability to simultaneously inhibit production of both β-lactamase and penicillin binding protein 2a. | 2018 | 29953721 |
| 8964 | 9 | 0.9995 | Analysis of the Oxidative Stress Regulon Identifies soxS as a Genetic Target for Resistance Reversal in Multidrug-Resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae. In bacteria, the defense system deployed to counter oxidative stress is orchestrated by three transcriptional factors, SoxS, SoxR, and OxyR. Although the regulon that these factors control is known in many bacteria, similar data are not available for Klebsiella pneumoniae. To address this data gap, oxidative stress was artificially induced in K. pneumoniae MGH78578 using paraquat and the corresponding oxidative stress regulon recorded using transcriptome sequencing (RNA-seq). The soxS gene was significantly induced during oxidative stress, and a knockout mutant was constructed to explore its functionality. The wild type and mutant were grown in the presence of paraquat and subjected to RNA-seq to elucidate the soxS regulon in K. pneumoniae MGH78578. Genes that are commonly regulated both in the oxidative stress and soxS regulons were identified and denoted as the oxidative SoxS regulon; these included a group of genes specifically regulated by SoxS. Efflux pump-encoding genes and global regulators were identified as part of this regulon. Consequently, the isogenic soxS mutant was found to exhibit a reduction in the minimum bactericidal concentration against tetracycline compared to that of the wild type. Impaired efflux activity, allowing tetracycline to be accumulated in the cytoplasm to bactericidal levels, was further evaluated using a tetraphenylphosphonium (TPP(+)) accumulation assay. The soxS mutant was also susceptible to tetracycline in vivo in a zebrafish embryo model. We conclude that the soxS gene could be considered a genetic target against which an inhibitor could be developed and used in combinatorial therapy to combat infections associated with multidrug-resistant K. pneumoniae. IMPORTANCE Antimicrobial resistance is a global health challenge. Few new antibiotics have been developed for use over the years, and preserving the efficacy of existing compounds is an important step to protect public health. This paper describes a study that examines the effects of exogenously induced oxidative stress on K. pneumoniae and uncovers a target that could be useful to harness as a strategy to mitigate resistance. | 2021 | 34098732 |
| 8965 | 10 | 0.9995 | Resistance characterization and transcriptomic analysis of imipenem-induced drug resistance in Escherichia coli. BACKGROUND: Bacteria can develop resistance to various antibiotics under selective pressure, leading to multifaceted changes in resistance mechanisms. Transcriptomic sequencing allows for the observation of transcriptional level alterations in cells under antibiotic stress. Understanding the bacterial response to such stress is essential for deciphering their strategy against drug-resistant antibiotics and identifying potential targets for antibiotic development. METHODS: This study using wild-type (WT) Escherichia coli (E. coli) discovered that continuous in vitro induction screening for imipenem-resistant strains resulted in bacteria with enhanced biofilm-forming ability and mutations in antibiotic target sites. Transcriptomic sequencing of the resistant bacteria revealed significant changes in carbon and amino acid metabolism, nutrient assimilation, substance transport, nucleotide metabolism, protein biosynthesis, and cell wall biosynthesis. The up-regulated drug efflux genes were disrupted using gene knockout technology. Drug sensitivity tests indicated that drug efflux has a minimal effect on imipenem resistance. RESULTS: This suggests a strategy for E. coli drug resistance involving the reduction of unnecessary substance synthesis and metabolism, coupled with an increase in activities that aid in resisting foreign threats. | 2024 | 39624129 |
| 8968 | 11 | 0.9995 | Antibiotic stress, genetic response and altered permeability of E. coli. BACKGROUND: Membrane permeability is the first step involved in resistance of bacteria to an antibiotic. The number and activity of efflux pumps and outer membrane proteins that constitute porins play major roles in the definition of intrinsic resistance in Gram-negative bacteria that is altered under antibiotic exposure. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Here we describe the genetic regulation of porins and efflux pumps of Escherichia coli during prolonged exposure to increasing concentrations of tetracycline and demonstrate, with the aid of quantitative real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction methodology and western blot detection, the sequence order of genetic expression of regulatory genes, their relationship to each other, and the ensuing increased activity of genes that code for transporter proteins of efflux pumps and down-regulation of porin expression. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: This study demonstrates that, in addition to the transcriptional regulation of genes coding for membrane proteins, the post-translational regulation of proteins involved in the permeability of Gram-negative bacteria also plays a major role in the physiological adaptation to antibiotic exposure. A model is presented that summarizes events during the physiological adaptation of E. coli to tetracycline exposure. | 2007 | 17426813 |
| 8969 | 12 | 0.9995 | Breaching the Barrier: Genome-Wide Investigation into the Role of a Primary Amine in Promoting E. coli Outer-Membrane Passage and Growth Inhibition by Ampicillin. Gram-negative bacteria are problematic for antibiotic development due to the low permeability of their cell envelopes. To rationally design new antibiotics capable of breaching this barrier, more information is required about the specific components of the cell envelope that prevent the passage of compounds with different physiochemical properties. Ampicillin and benzylpenicillin are β-lactam antibiotics with identical chemical structures except for a clever synthetic addition of a primary amine group in ampicillin, which promotes its accumulation in Gram-negatives. Previous work showed that ampicillin is better able to pass through the outer membrane porin OmpF in Escherichia coli compared to benzylpenicillin. It is not known, however, how the primary amine may affect interaction with other cell envelope components. This study applied TraDIS to identify genes that affect E. coli fitness in the presence of equivalent subinhibitory concentrations of ampicillin and benzylpenicillin, with a focus on the cell envelope. Insertions that compromised the outer membrane, particularly the lipopolysaccharide layer, were found to decrease fitness under benzylpenicillin exposure, but had less effect on fitness under ampicillin treatment. These results align with expectations if benzylpenicillin is poorly able to pass through porins. Disruption of genes encoding the AcrAB-TolC efflux system were detrimental to survival under both antibiotics, but particularly ampicillin. Indeed, insertions in these genes and regulators of acrAB-tolC expression were differentially selected under ampicillin treatment to a greater extent than insertions in ompF. These results suggest that maintaining ampicillin efflux may be more significant to E. coli survival than full inhibition of OmpF-mediated uptake. IMPORTANCE Due to the growing antibiotic resistance crisis, there is a critical need to develop new antibiotics, particularly compounds capable of targeting high-priority antibiotic-resistant Gram-negative pathogens. In order to develop new compounds capable of overcoming resistance a greater understanding of how Gram-negative bacteria are able to prevent the uptake and accumulation of many antibiotics is required. This study used a novel genome wide approach to investigate the significance of a primary amine group as a chemical feature that promotes the uptake and accumulation of compounds in the Gram-negative model organism Escherichia coli. The results support previous biochemical observations that the primary amine promotes passage through the outer membrane porin OmpF, but also highlight active efflux as a major resistance factor. | 2022 | 36409154 |
| 8949 | 13 | 0.9995 | Potential Risk of Spreading Resistance Genes within Extracellular-DNA-Dependent Biofilms of Streptococcus mutans in Response to Cell Envelope Stress Induced by Sub-MICs of Bacitracin. Antibiotics are used to treat or prevent some types of bacterial infection. The inappropriate use of antibiotics unnecessarily promotes antibiotic resistance and increases resistant bacteria, and controlling these bacteria is difficult. While the emergence of drug-resistant bacteria is a serious problem, the behavior of drug-resistant bacteria is not fully understood. In this study, we investigated the behavior of Streptococcus mutans, a major etiological agent of dental caries that is resistant to bacitracin, which is a cell wall-targeting antibiotic, and focused on biofilm formation in the presence of bacitracin. S. mutans UA159 most strongly induced extracellular DNA (eDNA)-dependent biofilm formation in the presence of bacitracin at 1/8× MIC. The ΔmbrC and ΔmbrD mutant strains, which lack bacitracin resistance, also formed biofilms in the presence of bacitracin at 1/2× MIC. This difference between the wild type and the mutants was caused by the induction of atlA expression in the mid-log phase. We also revealed that certain rgp genes involved in the synthesis of rhamnose-glucose polysaccharide related to cell wall synthesis were downregulated by bacitracin. In addition, glucosyltransferase-I was also involved in eDNA-dependent biofilm formation. The biofilm led to increased transformation efficiencies and promoted horizontal gene transfer. Biofilms were also induced by ampicillin and vancomycin, antibiotics targeting cell wall synthesis, suggesting that cell envelope stress triggers biofilm formation. Therefore, the expression of the atlA and rgp genes is regulated by S. mutans, which forms eDNA-dependent biofilms, promoting horizontal gene transfer in response to cell envelope stress induced by sub-MICs of antibiotics.IMPORTANCE Antibiotics have been reported to induce biofilm formation in many bacteria at subinhibitory concentrations. Accordingly, it is conceivable that the MIC against drug-sensitive bacteria may promote biofilm formation of resistant bacteria. Since drug-resistant bacteria have spread, it is important to understand the behavior of resistant bacteria. Streptococcus mutans is bacitracin resistant, and the 1/8× MIC of bacitracin, which is a cell wall-targeted antibiotic, induced eDNA-dependent biofilm formation. The ΔmbrC and ΔmbrD strains, which are not resistant to bacitracin, also formed biofilms in the presence of bacitracin at 1/2× MIC, and biofilms of both the wild type and mutants promoted horizontal gene transfer. Another cell wall-targeted antibiotic, vancomycin, showed effects on biofilms and gene transfer similar to those of bacitracin. Thus, treatment with cell wall-targeted antibiotics may promote the spread of drug-resistant genes in biofilms. Therefore, the behavior of resistant bacteria in the presence of antibiotics at sub-MICs should be investigated when using antibiotics. | 2020 | 32532873 |
| 9103 | 14 | 0.9995 | Development of cannabidiol derivatives as potent broad-spectrum antibacterial agents with membrane-disruptive mechanism. The emergence of antibiotic resistance has brought a significant burden to public health. Here, we designed and synthesized a series of cannabidiol derivatives by biomimicking the structure and function of cationic antibacterial peptides. This is the first report on the design of cannabidiol derivatives as broad-spectrum antibacterial agents. Through the structure-activity relationship (SAR) study, we found a lead compound 23 that killed both Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria via a membrane-targeting mechanism of action with low resistance frequencies. Compound 23 also exhibited very weak hemolytic activity, low toxicity toward mammalian cells, and rapid bactericidal properties. To further validate the membrane action mechanism of compound 23, we performed transcriptomic analysis using RNA-seq, which revealed that treatment with compound 23 altered many cell wall/membrane/envelope biogenesis-related genes in Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. More importantly, compound 23 showed potent in vivo antibacterial efficacy in murine corneal infection models caused by Staphylococcus aureus or Pseudomonas aeruginosa. These findings would provide a new design idea for the discovery of novel broad-spectrum antibacterial agents to overcome the antibiotic resistance crisis. | 2024 | 38266554 |
| 8895 | 15 | 0.9995 | Loss of DNA mismatch repair genes leads to acquisition of antibiotic resistance independent of secondary mutations. Antibiotic resistant bacteria have been a rising clinical concern for decades. Beyond acquisition of alleles conferring resistance, bacteria under stress (e.g., from changing environmental conditions or mutations) can have higher intrinsic resistance to antibiotics than unstressed cells. This concern is expanded for gram-negative bacteria which have a protective outer membrane serving as an additional barrier against harmful molecules such as antibiotics. Here, we report a pathway which increases antibiotic resistance (i.e., minimum inhibitory concentration) in response to inactivation of the DNA Mismatch Repair pathway (MMR). This pathway led to increased intrinsic resistance and was independent of secondary mutations. Specifically, deletion of the DNA mismatch repair genes mutL or mutS caused resistance to various antibiotics spanning different classes, molecular sizes, and mechanisms of action in several different E. coli K-12 MG1655 strains, and in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2. This pathway was independent of the SOS response (severe DNA damage response). However, the patterns of resistance correlated with previously reported increases in MMR mutants in rates of homoeologous recombination, homologous recombination between non-identical DNA strands. Mutations expected to lower rates of recombination in MMR mutants also decreased the resistance to most antibiotics. Finally, we found lysis occurs in MMR mutants and may contribute to resistance to other antibiotics. Our results have demonstrated a novel mechanism that increases antibiotic resistance in direct response to loss of MMR genes, and we propose this resistance involves increased rates of homoeologous recombination and cell lysis. The increased antibiotic resistance of MMR mutants provides a path for these cells to survive in antibiotics long enough to develop more specific resistance mutations and so may contribute to the development of new clinical resistance alleles. | 2025 | 40667202 |
| 8897 | 16 | 0.9995 | Clinically relevant mutant DNA gyrase alters supercoiling, changes the transcriptome, and confers multidrug resistance. Bacterial DNA is maintained in a supercoiled state controlled by the action of topoisomerases. Alterations in supercoiling affect fundamental cellular processes, including transcription. Here, we show that substitution at position 87 of GyrA of Salmonella influences sensitivity to antibiotics, including nonquinolone drugs, alters global supercoiling, and results in an altered transcriptome with increased expression of stress response pathways. Decreased susceptibility to multiple antibiotics seen with a GyrA Asp87Gly mutant was not a result of increased efflux activity or reduced reactive-oxygen production. These data show that a frequently observed and clinically relevant substitution within GyrA results in altered expression of numerous genes, including those important in bacterial survival of stress, suggesting that GyrA mutants may have a selective advantage under specific conditions. Our findings help contextualize the high rate of quinolone resistance in pathogenic strains of bacteria and may partly explain why such mutant strains are evolutionarily successful. IMPORTANCE: Fluoroquinolones are a powerful group of antibiotics that target bacterial enzymes involved in helping bacteria maintain the conformation of their chromosome. Mutations in the target enzymes allow bacteria to become resistant to these antibiotics, and fluoroquinolone resistance is common. We show here that these mutations also provide protection against a broad range of other antimicrobials by triggering a defensive stress response in the cell. This work suggests that fluoroquinolone resistance mutations may be beneficial under a range of conditions. | 2013 | 23882012 |
| 6326 | 17 | 0.9995 | Identification of novel metronidazole-inducible genes in Mycobacterium smegmatis using a customized amplification library. The incidence of antibiotic resistance in pathogenic bacteria is rising. Bacterial resistance may be a natural defense of organisms, or it may result from spontaneous mutations or the acquisition of exogenous resistance genes. We grew spontaneous metronidazole-resistant Mycobacterium smegmatis mutants on solid medium cultures and employed differential expression using a customized amplification library to analyze the global gene profiles of metronidazole-resistant mutants under hypoxic conditions. In total, 66 genes involved in metronidazole resistance were identified and functionally characterized using the gene role category of M. smegmatis. Overall, genes associated with cell wall synthesis, such as methyltransferase and glycosyltransferase, and genes encoding drug transporters were highly expressed. The genes may be involved in the natural drug resistance of mycobacteria by increasing mycobacterial cell wall permeability and the efflux pumps of active drugs. In addition, the genes may play a role in dormancy. The genes identified in this study may lead to a better understanding of the mechanisms of metronidazole resistance during dormancy. | 2008 | 18373646 |
| 8307 | 18 | 0.9995 | PBP3 inhibition elicits adaptive responses in Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Adaptive evolution depends on both the genetic variability in a population of organisms and the selection of the better adapted genotypes. However, for the fittest variants to be selected they must survive over a sufficient period under the new conditions. Bacteria are often exposed to different types of stress in nature, including antibiotics. We analysed the global expression profiles of the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa in response to ceftazidime, a PBP3 inhibitor, at different concentrations and times. PBP3 inhibition exerts a global impact on the transcription of a large number of genes. From an adaptive perspective, it is noteworthy the induction of several SOS genes, as well as adaptation, protection and antibiotic resistance genes. Intriguingly, transcription of pyocin genes, previously described as SOS-regulated, was repressed upon PBP3 inhibition. Ciprofloxacin, an SOS inducer, produced transcriptional induction of pyocins. Our results indicate that: (i) the SOS responses resulting from treatments with these two antibiotics cause only partially overlapping transcription profiles; (ii) PBP3 and DNA-gyrase inhibition produce opposite effects on transcription of pyocin genes. Consequently, ceftazidime decreases ciprofloxacin toxicity; (iii) error-prone DNA-polymerase DinB is induced by PBP3 inhibition but not by DNA-gyrase inhibition; (iv) PBP3 inhibition causes induced mutagenesis; (v) ceftazidime upregulates several antibiotic-resistance and adaptation genes; and (vi) ceftazidime concentrations thought previously to be lethal are not, as most cells treated with ceftazidime remain alive and recover their capacity to form colonies. Thus, transcriptional changes demonstrated in this work are likely to be adaptively relevant to cells that survive. | 2006 | 16956383 |
| 6322 | 19 | 0.9995 | A soxRS-constitutive mutation contributing to antibiotic resistance in a clinical isolate of Salmonella enterica (Serovar typhimurium). The soxRS regulon is activated by redox-cycling drugs such as paraquat and by nitric oxide. The >15 genes of this system provide resistance to both oxidants and multiple antibiotics. An association between clinical quinolone resistance and elevated expression of the soxRS regulon has been observed in Escherichia coli, but this association has not been explored for other enteropathogenic bacteria. Here we describe a soxRS-constitutive mutation in a clinical strain of Salmonella enterica (serovar Typhimurium) that arose with the development of resistance to quinolones during treatment. The elevated quinolone resistance in this strain derived from a point mutation in the soxR gene and could be suppressed in trans by multicopy wild-type soxRS. Multiple-antibiotic resistance was also transferred to a laboratory strain of S. enterica by introducing the cloned mutant soxR gene from the clinical strain. The results show that constitutive expression of soxRS can contribute to antibiotic resistance in clinically relevant S. enterica. | 2001 | 11120941 |