scholarly journals Contribution of the MexXY Multidrug Efflux Pump and Other Chromosomal Mechanisms on Aminoglycoside Resistance in Pseudomonas aeruginosa Isolates from Canine and Feline Infections

2012 ◽  
Vol 74 (12) ◽  
pp. 1575-1582 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kanchana POONSUK ◽  
Rungtip CHUANCHUEN
2000 ◽  
Vol 44 (3) ◽  
pp. 658-664 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hideaki Maseda ◽  
Hiroshi Yoneyama ◽  
Taiji Nakae

ABSTRACT Pseudomonas aeruginosa expresses a low level of the MexAB-OprM efflux pump and shows natural resistance to many structurally and functionally diverse antibiotics. The mutation that has been referred to previously as nfxC expresses an additional efflux pump, MexEF-OprN, exhibiting resistance to fluoroquinolones, imipenem, and chloramphenicol and hypersusceptibility to β-lactam antibiotics. To address the antibiotic specificity of the MexEF-OprN efflux pump, we introduced a plasmid carrying themexEF-oprN operon into P. aeruginosa lacking the mexAB-oprM operon. The transformants exhibited resistance to fluoroquinolones, trimethoprim, and chloramphenicol but, unlike most nfxC-type mutants, did not show β-lactam hypersusceptibility. The transformants exhibited additional resistance to tetracycline. In the next experiment, we analyzed the MexEF-OprN pump subunit(s) responsible for substrate selectivity by expressing MexE, MexF, OprN, and MexEF in strains lacking MexA, MexB, OprM, and MexAB, respectively. The MexEF-OprM/ΔMexAB transformants exhibited MexEF-OprN-type pump function that rendered the strains resistant to fluoroquinolones and chloramphenicol but did not change susceptibility to β-lactam antibiotics compared with the host strain. The MexAB-OprN/ΔOprM, MexAF-OprM/ΔMexB, and MexEB-OprM/ΔMexA mutants exhibited antibiotic susceptibility indistinguishable from that in the mutant lacking both types of efflux pumps. The results imply that the MexEF-OprM pump selects substrates by a MexEF functional unit. Interestingly, OprN did not link functionally with the MexAB complex, despite the fact that OprM interacted functionally with MexEF.


Author(s):  
Zheng Fan ◽  
Xiaolei Pan ◽  
Dan Wang ◽  
Ronghao Chen ◽  
Tongtong Fu ◽  
...  

Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an opportunistic pathogen that shows high intrinsic resistance to a variety of antibiotics. The MexX-MexY-OprM efflux pump plays an important role in the bacterial resistance to aminoglycoside antibiotics. Polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase) is a highly conserved exonuclease that plays important roles in RNA processing and bacterial response to environmental stresses. Previously, we demonstrated that PNPase controls the tolerance to fluoroquinolone antibiotics by influencing the production of pyocin in P. aeruginosa. In this study, we found that mutation of the PNPase coding gene (pnp) in P. aeruginosa increases the bacterial tolerance to aminoglycoside antibiotics. We further demonstrate that upregulation of the mexXY genes is responsible for the increased tolerance in the pnp mutant. Furthermore, our experimental results revealed that PNPase controls translation of the armZ mRNA through its 5′ untranslated region (5′-UTR). ArmZ had previously been shown to positively regulate the expression of mexXY. Therefore, our results revealed a novel role of PNPase in the regulation of armZ and subsequently the MexXY efflux pump.


2019 ◽  
Vol 64 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shannon R. Coleman ◽  
Travis Blimkie ◽  
Reza Falsafi ◽  
Robert E. W. Hancock

ABSTRACT Swarming surface motility is a complex adaptation leading to multidrug antibiotic resistance and virulence factor production in Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Here, we expanded previous studies to demonstrate that under swarming conditions, P. aeruginosa PA14 is more resistant to multiple antibiotics, including aminoglycosides, β-lactams, chloramphenicol, ciprofloxacin, tetracycline, trimethoprim, and macrolides, than swimming cells, but is not more resistant to polymyxin B. We investigated the mechanism(s) of swarming-mediated antibiotic resistance by examining the transcriptomes of swarming cells and swarming cells treated with tobramycin by transcriptomics (RNA-Seq) and reverse transcriptase quantitative PCR (qRT-PCR). RNA-Seq of swarming cells (versus swimming) revealed 1,581 dysregulated genes, including 104 transcriptional regulators, two-component systems, and sigma factors, numerous upregulated virulence and iron acquisition factors, and downregulated ribosomal genes. Strain PA14 mutants in resistome genes that were dysregulated under swarming conditions were tested for their ability to swarm in the presence of tobramycin. In total, 41 mutants in genes dysregulated under swarming conditions were shown to be more resistant to tobramycin under swarming conditions, indicating that swarming-mediated tobramycin resistance was multideterminant. Focusing on two genes downregulated under swarming conditions, both prtN and wbpW mutants were more resistant to tobramycin, while the prtN mutant was additionally resistant to trimethoprim under swarming conditions; complementation of these mutants restored susceptibility. RNA-Seq of swarming cells treated with subinhibitory concentrations of tobramycin revealed the upregulation of the multidrug efflux pump MexXY and downregulation of virulence factors.


2003 ◽  
Vol 47 (9) ◽  
pp. 2990-2992 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroshi Sekiya ◽  
Takehiko Mima ◽  
Yuji Morita ◽  
Teruo Kuroda ◽  
Tohru Mizushima ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT We isolated mutant YM644, which showed elevated resistance to norfloxacin, ethidium bromide, acriflavine, and rhodamine 6G, from Pseudomonas aeruginosa YM64, a strain that lacks four major multidrug efflux pumps. The genes responsible for the resistance were mexHI-opmD. Elevated ethidium extrusion was observed with cells of YM644 and YM64 harboring a plasmid carrying the genes. Disruption of the genes in the chromosomal DNA of YM644 made the cells sensitive to the drugs.


2017 ◽  
Vol 61 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Paulo Juarez ◽  
Katy Jeannot ◽  
Patrick Plésiat ◽  
Catherine Llanes

ABSTRACT The multidrug efflux system MexEF-OprN is produced at low levels in wild-type strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. However, in so-called nfxC mutants, mutational alteration of the gene mexS results in constitutive overexpression of the pump, along with increased resistance of the bacterium to chloramphenicol, fluoroquinolones, and trimethoprim. In this study, analysis of in vitro-selected chloramphenicol-resistant clones of strain PA14 led to the identification of a new class of MexEF-OprN-overproducing mutants (called nfxC2) exhibiting alterations in an as-yet-uncharacterized gene, PA14_38040 (homolog of PA2047 in strain PAO1). This gene is predicted to encode an AraC-like transcriptional regulator and was called cmrA (for chloramphenicol resistance activator). In nfxC2 mutants, the mutated CmrA increases its proper gene expression and upregulates the operon mexEF-oprN through MexS and MexT, resulting in a multidrug resistance phenotype without significant loss in bacterial virulence. Transcriptomic experiments demonstrated that CmrA positively regulates a small set of 11 genes, including PA14_38020 (homolog of PA2048), which is required for the MexS/T-dependent activation of mexEF-oprN. PA2048 codes for a protein sharing conserved domains with the quinol monooxygenase YgiN from Escherichia coli. Interestingly, exposure of strain PA14 to toxic electrophilic molecules (glyoxal, methylglyoxal, and cinnamaldehyde) strongly activates the CmrA pathway and upregulates MexEF-OprN and, thus, increases the resistance of P. aeruginosa to the pump substrates. A picture emerges in which MexEF-OprN is central in the response of the pathogen to stresses affecting intracellular redox homeostasis.


2004 ◽  
Vol 186 (1) ◽  
pp. 262-265 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gui-Xin He ◽  
Teruo Kuroda ◽  
Takehiko Mima ◽  
Yuji Morita ◽  
Tohru Mizushima ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT We cloned the gene PA1361 (we designated the gene pmpM), which seemed to encode a multidrug efflux pump belonging to the MATE family, of Pseudomonas aeruginosa by the PCR method using the drug-hypersensitive Escherichia coli KAM32 strain as a host. Cells of E. coli possessing the pmpM gene showed elevated resistance to several antimicrobial agents. We observed energy-dependent efflux of ethidium from cells possessing the pmpM gene. We found that PmpM is an H+-drug antiporter, and this finding is the first reported case of an H+-coupled efflux pump in the MATE family. Disruption and reintroduction of the pmpM gene in P. aeruginosa revealed that PmpM is functional and that benzalkonium chloride, fluoroquinolones, ethidium bromide, acriflavine, and tetraphenylphosphonium chloride are substrates for PmpM in this microorganism.


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