scholarly journals The stringent factor Rel from Mycobacterium abscessus regulates metabolism, but does not promote survival in stress or antibiotics

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Augusto Cesar Hunt-Serracín ◽  
Joseph M. Boll ◽  
Cara C. Boutte

AbstractThe stringent response is a broadly conserved stress response system that exhibits functional variability across bacterial clades. Here, we characterize the role of the stringent factor Rel in the non-tuberculous mycobacterial pathogen, Mycobacterium abscessus (Mab). We find that Rel in Mab is involved in restricting transcription of anabolism and growth genes in stress, as has been observed in many other species. However, the stringent response in Mab does not provide a survival advantage in several stress conditions or in antibiotic treatment. According to our transcriptional profiling, Rel in Mab does not activate transcription of stress response or antibiotic resistance genes. Instead, Rel actually represses transcription of many antibiotic resistance genes in stress. This study implies that combinatorial therapies with stringent factor inhibitors would not potentiate antibiotic treatment against Mab infections.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Augusto César Hunt-Serracín ◽  
Misha I. Kazi ◽  
Joseph M. Boll ◽  
Cara C. Boutte

The stringent response is a broadly conserved stress response system that exhibits functional variability across bacterial clades. Here, we characterize the role of the stringent factor Rel in the non-tuberculous mycobacterial pathogen, Mycobacterium abscessus ( Mab ). We found that deletion of rel does not ablate (p)ppGpp synthesis, and that rel does not provide a survival advantage in several stress conditions, or in antibiotic treatment. Transcriptional data show that Rel Mab is involved in regulating expression of anabolism and growth genes in stationary phase. However, it does not activate transcription of stress response or antibiotic resistance genes, and actually represses transcription of many antibiotic resistance genes. This work shows that there is an unannotated (p)ppGpp synthetase in Mab . Importance In this study, we examined the functional roles of the stringent factor Rel in Mycobacterium abscessus (Mab) . In most species, stringent factors synthesize the alarmone (p)ppGpp, which globally alters transcription to promote growth arrest and survival under stress and in antibiotic treatment. Our work shows that in Mab, an emerging pathogen which is resistant to many antibiotics, the stringent factor Rel is not solely responsible for synthesizing (p)ppGpp. We find that Rel Mab downregulates many metabolic genes under stress, but does not upregulate stress response genes and does not promote antibiotic tolerance. This study implies that there is another critical but unannotated (p)ppGpp synthetase in Mab, and suggests that Rel Mab inhibitors are unlikely to sensitize Mab infections to antibiotic treatment.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sally L. Bornbusch ◽  
Christine M. Drea

The overuse of man-made antibiotics has facilitated the global propagation of antibiotic resistance genes in animals, across natural and anthropogenically disturbed environments. Although antibiotic treatment is the most well-studied route by which resistance genes can develop and spread within host-associated microbiota, resistomes also can be acquired or enriched via more indirect routes, such as via transmission between hosts or via contact with antibiotic-contaminated matter within the environment. Relatively little is known about the impacts of anthropogenic disturbance on reservoirs of resistance genes in wildlife and their environments. We therefore tested for (a) antibiotic resistance genes in primate hosts experiencing different severities and types of anthropogenic disturbance (i.e., non-wildlife animal presence, human presence, direct human contact, and antibiotic treatment), and (b) covariation between host-associated and environmental resistomes. We used shotgun metagenomic sequencing of ring-tailed lemur (Lemur catta) gut resistomes and associated soil resistomes sampled from up to 10 sites: seven in the wilderness of Madagascar and three in captivity in Madagascar or the United States. We found that, compared to wild lemurs, captive lemurs harbored greater abundances of resistance genes, but not necessarily more diverse resistomes. Abundances of resistance genes were positively correlated with our assessments of anthropogenic disturbance, a pattern that was robust across all ten lemur populations. The composition of lemur resistomes was site-specific and the types of resistance genes reflected antibiotic usage in the country of origin, such as vancomycin use in Madagascar. We found support for multiple routes of ARG enrichment (e.g., via human contact, antibiotic treatment, and environmental acquisition) that differed across lemur populations, but could result in similar degrees of enrichment. Soil resistomes varied across natural habitats in Madagascar and, at sites with greater anthropogenic disturbance, lemurs and soil resistomes covaried. As one of the broadest, single-species investigations of wildlife resistomes to date, we show that the transmission and enrichment of antibiotic resistance genes varies across environments, thereby adding to the mounting evidence that the resistance crisis extends outside of traditional clinical settings.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Johan Bengtsson-Palme ◽  
Viktor Jonsson ◽  
Stefanie Heß

AbstractIt is generally accepted that intervention strategies to curb antibiotic resistance cannot solely focus on human and veterinary medicine but must also consider environmental settings. While the environment clearly has a role in the transmission of resistant bacteria, it is less clear what role it plays in the emergence of novel types of resistance. It has been suggested that the environment constitutes an enormous recruitment ground for resistance genes to pathogens, but the extent to which this actually happens is unknown. In this study, we built a model framework for resistance emergence and used the available quantitative data on the relevant processes to identify the steps which are limiting the appearance of antibiotic resistance determinants in human or animal pathogens. We also assessed the effect of uncertainty in the available data on the model results. We found that in a majority of scenarios, the environment would only play a minor role in the emergence of novel resistance genes. However, the uncertainty around this role is enormous, highlighting an urgent need of more quantitative data to understand the role of the environment in antibiotic resistance development. Specifically, more data is most needed on the fitness costs of antibiotic resistance gene (ARG) carriage, the degree of dispersal of resistant bacteria from the environment to humans, but also the rates of mobilization and horizontal transfer of ARGs. Quantitative data on these processes is instrumental to determine which processes that should be targeted for interventions to curb development and transmission of resistance.


2011 ◽  
Vol 60 (2) ◽  
pp. 211-215 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. S. Lopes ◽  
A. Hamouda ◽  
J. Findlay ◽  
S. G. B. Amyes

Acinetobacter baumannii is a Gram-negative pathogenic bacterium that often exhibits a multidrug-resistant phenotype causing infections at various sites of the body and increasingly leading to septicaemic shock. This study evaluated the role of acriflavine, a frameshift mutagen, on the movement of insertion sequence ISAba1 in clinical isolates of A. baumannii, with the focus on changes in expression levels of the bla ADC and bla OXA-51-like genes. Resistance profiles were assessed with consideration of ISAba1 acting as a promoter upstream of the bla ADC or bla OXA-51-like gene. ISAba1 movement was observed in the acriflavine mutants Ab153M and Ab1225M. Ab153M exhibited an increase in the MIC values of carbapenems and ceftazidime, with ISAba1 gained upstream of the bla ADC and bla OXA-51-like genes, correlating with an increase in gene expression. Reduced expression of the 17, 23 and 25 kDa outer-membrane proteins (OMPs) was also observed in Ab153M. There was a significant decrease in MIC values of carbapenems with the loss of ISAba1 upstream of the bla ADC and bla OXA-51-like genes in strain Ab1225M, and a significant decrease in bla OXA-51-like gene expression and, to a lesser extent, in bla ADC expression. Ab1225M and a serially subcultured Ab1225 strain (Ab1225s) exhibited overexpression of the 17, 23, 25 and 27 kDa OMPs. There was a decrease in MIC values of the carbapenems and piperacillin/tazobactam but not of ceftazidime in Ab1225s, which had ISAba1 upstream of the bla ADC and bla OXA-51-like genes. A significant decrease in bla OXA-51-like expression was observed in Ab1225s, whereas the expression of bla ADC was similar to that in the Ab1225 parental strain. The attenuation in this strain may be due to overexpression of OMPs and it is clear that, even if ISAba1 is present upstream of an antibiotic resistance gene, it may not necessarily contribute towards the overexpression of antibiotic resistance genes (bla OXA-51-like in Ab1225s). Movement of the IS element within the A. baumannii chromosome may be an important regulatory mechanism employed by the bacterium under particular stress conditions, and the ability to upregulate the expression of antibiotic resistance genes is likely to be an important factor in the pathogenicity of this bacterium.


2007 ◽  
Vol 51 (5) ◽  
pp. 1827-1829 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. W. Stokes ◽  
Liam D. H. Elbourne ◽  
Ruth M. Hall

ABSTRACT Transposon Tn1403 from a clinical Pseudomonas strain is composed of three transposons, including Tn5393c. A related transposon Tn1404* from a plant-associated Pseudomonas strain lacks Tn5393 but includes a transposon carrying the tet(C) tetracycline resistance determinant. These compound transposons illustrate the role of preexisting transposons in generating clusters of antibiotic resistance genes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 227 ◽  
pp. 112946
Author(s):  
Sen Li ◽  
Junjie Liu ◽  
Qin Yao ◽  
Zhenhua Yu ◽  
Yansheng Li ◽  
...  

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