| Literature DB >> 22162766 |
Béatrice Marquez1, Geneviève Ameye, Coralie M Vallet, Paul M Tulkens, Hélène A Poirel, Françoise Van Bambeke.
Abstract
Exposure of J774 mouse macrophages to stepwise increasing concentrations of ciprofloxacin, an antibiotic inhibiting bacterial topoisomerases, selects for resistant cells that overexpress the efflux transporter Abcc4 (Marquez et al. [2009] Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 53: 2410-2416), encoded by the Abcc4 gene located on Chromosome 14qE4. In this study, we report the genomic alterations occurring along the selection process. Abcc4 expression progressively increased upon selection rounds, with exponential changes observed between cells exposed to 150 and 200 µM of ciprofloxacin, accompanied by a commensurate decrease in ciprofloxacin accumulation. Molecular cytogenetics experiments showed that this overexpression is linked to Abcc4 gene overrepresentation, grading from a partial trisomy of Chr 14 at the first step of selection (cells exposed to 100 µM ciprofloxacin), to low-level amplifications (around three copies) of Abcc4 locus on 1 or 2 Chr 14 (cells exposed to 150 µM ciprofloxacin), followed by high-level amplification of Abcc4 as homogeneous staining region (hsr), inserted on 3 different derivative Chromosomes (cells exposed to 200 µM ciprofloxacin). In revertant cells obtained after more than 60 passages of culture without drug, the Abcc4 hsr amplification was lost in approx. 70% of the population. These data suggest that exposing cells to sufficient concentrations of an antibiotic with low affinity for eukaryotic topoisomerases can cause major genomic alterations that may lead to the overexpression of the transporter responsible for its efflux. Gene amplification appears therefore as a mechanism of resistance that can be triggered by non-anticancer agents but contribute to cross-resistance, and is partially and slowly reversible.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 22162766 PMCID: PMC3230599 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0028368
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Relationship between cellular accumulation of ciprofloxacin and Abcc4 expression.
A. Upper panel: western blot of Abcc4 (and actin as loading control) in cell lysates from wild-type (WT) macrophages and from cells resistant to different concentrations of ciprofloxacin (100 µM [CR100], 150 µM [CR150] and 200 µM [CR200]). B. Ciprofloxacin accumulation and Abcc4 mRNA and protein relative expression in cells made resistant to increasing concentrations of ciprofloxacin; (i) left axis (open bars): accumulation of ciprofloxacin in % (mean ± SD [n = 3]) of the value measured in wild-type cells incubated during 2 h with 50 µM ciprofloxacin [absolute value: 162 ng/mg prot.]); (ii) right axis: Abcc4 mRNA (grey bars) and protein (black bars) levels as a ratio to the value observed in wild-type cells (set to 1). C. Correlation between ciprofloxacin residual accumulation and Abcc4 relative expression in these cells. The curve corresponds to a best fit based on an inverse logarithmic function (y = 11.5×e−+14.92).
Figure 2Molecular cytogenetics of relevant chromosomes in wild-type, fully ciprofloxacin-resistant, and revertant macrophages.
mFISH and FISH experiments (red: control probe; green: Abcc4 probe) for relevant chromosomes in wild-type macrophages, in the clones of the fully ciprofloxacin-resistant macrophages CR200, and in the revertant macrophages (Rev200). Karyotypes of the cell lines (abnormalities illustrated in the figure are highlighted in bold): a) wild-type cells: 72<3n>,X,der(X)T(X;11)(E or F1;?B5),der(1)T(1;6)(C?;B?3), +der(1)(1A1→1C?::6B?3→6D∼F::X? →X?),−3,+der(5;17)(5A1→5C2::17A1→17?), der(6)T(1;6)(?D;B3),+der(6),+der(9)T(9;19)(?B;C2),+?Del(12)(?B),−13,idic(13), der(14)T(3;14)(E2;C?1),idic(15),−18,−19,idic(19),ace(3)x2,ace(18)x2; b) CR200 cells (“idem” refers to the chromosomal abnormalities stated in the wild-type cells karyotype): – clone I: 72,idem,Is(5;14)(B;?),+9,−der(9)T(9;19),+13,−idic(13),ace(3)x2∼3, ace(?14)x0∼2,ace(18)x1∼2[cp17]; – clone II: 72,idem,?+9,−der(9)T(9;19),+13,−idic(13),mar1x2∼3, ace(?14)x1∼2,ace(18)x1∼2[cp3]; – clone III: 71,idem,+der(1)T(1;2)(H?;?),−der(9)T(9;19),+13, −idic(13),der(16)T(14;16)(?;C4),ace(3)x3,ace(?14)x0∼2[cp2].
Figure 3Abcc4 copies detected by FISH on metaphases of cultured macrophage cell lines.
A. Relative abundance of the clones according to number of Abcc4 copies detected by FISH in the different cell lines (WT: wild-type cells; CR100, 150, and 200: cells resistant to 100, 150, and 200 µM of ciprofloxacin; Rev200: revertant cells). Hsr, homogeneous staining region. B. Schematic representation of chromosomes with Abcc4 copies in the same cell lines (only chromosomes with Abcc4 copies are shown; Chr der(14)T(3;14)(E2;C?1) (Chr B), present in almost all clones, but which lacks Abcc4 locus, is not represented). Percentages refer to the relative abundance of each clone, and letters between brackets to Chromosomes as identified in Figure 2.
Figure 4DnajC3 and Abcc4 FISH analysis in selected resistant cell lines.
Metaphase spreads of CR150 (left) and CR200 (clone II; right) cells were subjected to FISH analysis with an Abcc4 BAC probe (green) and a DnajC3 BAC probe (red). Chromosomes were counterstained with DAPI. Colocalization of both probes in amplified regions is highlighted with white circles; green arrow indicates Chr 14 with Abcc4 and DnajC3 copies.