| Literature DB >> 27790199 |
Qiwen Hu1, Huagang Peng1, Xiancai Rao1.
Abstract
Vancomycin has been used as the last resort in the clinical treatment of serious Staphylococcus aureus infections. Vancomycin-intermediate S. aureus (VISA) was discovered almost two decades ago. Aside from the vancomycin-intermediate phenotype, VISA strains from the clinic or laboratory exhibited common characteristics, such as thickened cell walls, reduced autolysis, and attenuated virulence. However, the genetic mechanisms responsible for the reduced vancomycin susceptibility in VISA are varied. The comparative genomics of vancomycin-susceptible S. aureus (VSSA)/VISA pairs showed diverse genetic mutations in VISA; only a small number of these mutations have been experimentally verified. To connect the diversified genotypes and common phenotypes in VISA, we reviewed the genetic alterations in the relative determinants, including mutations in the vraTSR, graSR, walKR, stk1/stp1, rpoB, clpP, and cmk genes. Especially, we analyzed the mechanism through which diverse mutations mediate vancomycin resistance. We propose a unified model that integrates diverse gene functions and complex biochemical processes in VISA upon the action of vancomycin.Entities:
Keywords: genetic mechanisms; genotypes; molecular events; vancomycin; vancomycin intermediate Staphylococcus aureus
Year: 2016 PMID: 27790199 PMCID: PMC5062060 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2016.01601
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Figure 1The mode of action of vancomycin in . By binding to the C-teminal D-Ala-D-Ala residues of the pentapeptide, vancomycin inhibits the cross bridge formation between pentapeptide and pentaglycine. GlcNAc, N-acetylglucosamine; MurNAc, N-Acetylmuramic acid.
Figure 2Timeline indicates the year in which an event occurred or was reported. The increased use of vancomycin in the USA, France, Italy, Germany, the United Kingdom, and the Netherlands was shown as tons of vancomycin in the y-axis, which was modified from reference Levine (2006).
Mutations identified in hVISA/VISA strains comparied with the progenitor VSSA by whole genome sequencing.
| JH1/JH2/JH5/JH6/JH9 | 1/4/6/8/8 | 7/8/16/31 | VraT-H164R, RpoB-D471Y+A473S+A477S+E478D RpoC-E854K, PrsA-ΔC | 2007 | Mwangi et al., |
| Mu3/Mu50 | 2/8 | 17 | GraR-N197S, RpoB-H481Y, Fdh2-A297V, Sle1-Δ67aa | 2008 | Neoh et al., |
| Mu50Ω/Mu50 | 0.5–1/6–7 | 10 | GraR-N197S, VraS-234ΔC | 2009 | Cui et al., |
| N315ΔIP/H14 | 1/2 | 1 | VraS-S329L | 2009 | Katayama et al., |
| ISP794/AR376 | 2/4 | 3 | Stp1-Q12ΔC, VraS-G45R, YjbH-K23ΔC | 2011 | Renzoni et al., |
| N315LR5P1/LR5P1-V3 | 1.5/4 | 2 | WalK-ΔQ371, ClpP-ΔN | 2011 | Shoji et al., |
| JKD6000/JKD6001 | 1/4 | 7 | WalR-A96T | 2011 | Howden et al., |
| JKD6004/JKD6005 | 2/4 | 1 | WalR-K208R | 2011 | Howden et al., |
| JKD6009/JKD6008 | 2/4 | 10 | WalK-G223D, GraS-T136I | 2011 | Howden et al., |
| JKD6021/JKD6023 | 1/4 | 8 | WalK-V268F | 2011 | Howden et al., |
| JKD6052/JKD6051 | 1/4 | 7 | RpoB-H481Y, SarR-A68T | 2011 | Howden et al., |
| SG-S/SG-R | 1.5/3 | 5 | VraT-Y220C, YycH-A165D, VraG-G551E | 2012 | Gardete et al., |
| A5937/A5940 | 1.5/4 | 6 | Stp1-113ΔC, H481Y | 2012 | Cameron et al., |
| A6264/A6226 | 2/3 | 13 | DltA-S38R, ArlS-38ΔC | 2012 | Cameron et al., |
| A6300/A6298 | 2/4 | 8 | Drp35-N83S | 2012 | Cameron et al., |
| A9635/A9636/A9637/A9638/A9639 | 1/1/2/3/4 | 1/2/5/4 | VraT-N74D, VraG-A580V | 2012 | Cameron et al., |
| A8117/A8118/A8392 | 1/4/8 | 3/5 | WalK-R263C-S273N, WalK-ΔQ371, TcaR-I69S-K95N, RpoB-S1052L | 2012 | Cameron et al., |
| VSSA-A1/VISA-A2 | 1/8 | 6 | Stp1-E18D19-duplication | 2012 | Passalacqua et al., |
| JH1/JH1R1 | 1/3 | 4 | WalK-G223D | 2013 | Vidaillac et al., |
| JH1/JH1R2 | 1/3 | 1 | RpoB-R484C+N641K | 2013 | Vidaillac et al., |
| Mu3/Mu3 derived 45 VISA isolates | 3/6–12 | 1–4 mutations affecting a total of 48 genes | BPB4-S140N, TarO-P94L, Cmk-A20G, etc. | 2013 | Matsuo et al., |
| D32/D52/D56/D83/D90/D109 | Not shown | 1/1/4/6/4 | WalK-Q369R, WalK-M220I, VraG-ΔL294N295 | 2014 | Van Hal et al., |
| 109/2482 | 1.5/3 | 11 | RpoB-A477V+S529L, AgrC-L193ΔC | 2014 | Chen et al., |
| RN4220Δ | 1.5/64 | 75 | VraS-L114S+D242G, WalK-I544M, MprF-H224Y, RpoD-D201N | 2014 | Berscheid et al., |
| MW-2/SV-1 | 2/16 or 1/16 | 5 | WalK-G223D, TarO-frameshift | 2015 | Hu et al., |
| CH1/CH2/CH3/CH4/CH5/CH6/CH7 | 2/2/2/3/3/3/4 | 0/1/3/2/2/2 | YycH-ΔC, MprF-S295L | 2015 | Chen et al., |
| 13136p−m+/13136p−m+V5/13136p−m+V20 | 1/8/16 | 8/9 | Stp1-A143G, TarO-L670F | 2015 | Hattangady et al., |
| 8 MR/VR pairs | 1–2/8–32 | 50–172 in different pairs | Diverse mutations in GraS, RpoB, RpoC, WalK and etc. | 2015 | Ishii et al., |
ΔN, N-terminal deletion; ΔC, C-terminal deletion.
Experimental verified mutations in VISA.
| VraTSR | 2009 | VraS-S329L | N315ΔIP | 1 → 2 | pKOR1 mediated allele swapping | Katayama et al., |
| 2012 | VraT-Y220C | SG-R | 3 → 1.5 | pGC2 mediated complementation with wild type VraT | Gardete et al., | |
| 2012 | VraS-234Δ | SG-rev | 1 → 3 | pGC2 mediated complementation with wild type VraS | Gardete et al., | |
| 2014 | VraS-L114S+D242G | NCTC8325 | 1.5 → 4 | Temperature-sensitive shuttle vector pMAD mediated allele swapping | Berscheid et al., | |
| GraSR | 2008 | GraS-T136I | JKD6009 | 2 → 6 | pKOR1 mediated allele swapping | Howden et al., |
| 2008 | GraR-N197S | Mu3 | 2 → 4 | pYT3 mediated overexpression | Neoh et al., | |
| 2011 | GraS-T136I | JKD6009 | 1.5 → 2 | pKOR1 mediated allele swapping | Howden et al., | |
| WalKR | 2011 | WalK-G223D | JKD6009 | 1.5 → 3 | pKOR1 mediated allele swapping | Howden et al., |
| 2011 | WalR-K208R | JKD6004 or JKD6005 | 1.5 → 4 or 4 → 1.5 | pKOR1 mediated allele swapping | Howden et al., | |
| 2011 | WalK-ΔQ371 | LR5P1 | 1.5 → 3 | pKOR1 mediated allele swapping | Shoji et al., | |
| 2015 | WalK-G223D | MW2 | 2 → 4 | pBTs mediated allelic replacement, pBTs is derived from pBT2 and pKOR1 | Hu et al., | |
| ClpP | 2011 | ClpP-ΔN | LR5P1 | 1.5 → 2 | pKOR1 mediated allele swapping | Shoji et al., |
| Stp1 | 2012 | Stp1 deletion | A5937 | 1.5 → 3 | pKOR1 mediated gene deletion | Cameron et al., |
| 2012 | Stp1-E18D19 duplication | Strain A2 | 6–8 → 3 | pOS1-P | Passalacqua et al., | |
| Cmk | 2014 | Cmk-A20G, CmK-T(-13)A | Mu3 | 2 → 8, 3 → 8 | pKOR1 mediated allele swapping | Matsuo et al., |
| 2014 | Cmk-A20G, CmK-T(-13)A | Mu3p27V6–10 | 8 → 2, 8 → 3 | Introduce the pND50- | Matsuo et al., | |
| VraS+GraR | 2009 | VraS-I5N+GraR-N197S | Mu50Ω | 4 → 6 | pKOR1-mediated allele swapping | Cui et al., |
| GraS+WalK | 2011 | GraS-T136I+ WalK-G223D | JKD6009 | 1.5 → 4 | pKOR1-mediated allele swapping | Howden et al., |
| GraR+RpoB | 2011 | GraR-N197S+RpoB-H481Y | Mu3 | 2 → 6 | pKOR1-mediated allele swapping | Matsuo et al., |
| WalK+ClpP | 2011 | WalK-ΔQ371+ ClpP-ΔN | LR5P1 | 1.5 → 4 | pKOR1 mediated allele swapping | Shoji et al., |
| VraS+Stp1+YjbH | 2011 | VraS-G45R+Stp1-Q12ΔC+YjbH-K23ΔC | ISP794 | 2 → 4 | Plasmid mediated gene replacement and bacteriophage transduction mediated triple mutant construction | Renzoni et al., |
| VraS+GraR+RpoB+Fdh2+Sle1+MsrR | 2016 | VraS-S329L+GraR-N197S+RpoB-H481Y+Fdh2-A297V+Sle1-Δ67aa+MsrR-E164K | N315ΔIP | 1 → 12 | pKOR1 mediated allele swapping | Katayama et al., |
The vancomycin MIC levels determination methods are not consistent with each other in different studies.
Summary of substrates of Stk1/Stp1 determined in .
| VraR | Vancomycin-resistance-associated response regulator VraR | Thr106, Thr119, Thr175, Thr178 | Decreased DNA-binding properties | Canova et al., |
| SarA, | SarA/MgrA family transcriptional regulators | Cys9 | Decrased DNA binding activity | Sun et al., |
| MgrA, | SarA/MgrA family transcriptional regulators | Cys12 | Decrased DNA binding activity | Sun et al., |
| SarZ | SarA/MgrA family transcriptional regulators | Cys13 | Decrased DNA binding activity | Sun et al., |
| CcpA | Catabolite control protein A | Thr-18, Thr-33 | Electrophoretic mobility shift assays demonstrated that the CcpA DNA binding activity was completely abrogated for the phosphorylated CcpA | Leiba et al., |
| GraR | a two-component system involved in resistance to cationic antimicrobial peptides | Thr128, Thr130, Thr149 | Increased DNA binding activity | Fridman et al., |
| SpoVG | Modulator of virulence factor synthesis and antibiotic resistance | Thr4, Thr13, Thr24, Ser41 | Enhanced the DNA binding activity | Bischoff et al., |
| LuxS | Autoinducer-2 synthase | Thr14 | The enzymatic activity of the phosphorylated isoform of LuxS was abrogated compared to that of non-phosphorylated LuxS | Cluzel et al., |
| PurA | Adenylosuccinate synthase involved in synthesis of AMP | Not determined | Decreased enzymatic activity of PurA | Donat et al., |
Summary of ClpP or ClpC substrates related to vancomycin resistance in VISA.
| Sle1 | Autolysin precursor |
| Atl | Bifunctional autolysin precursor |
| Glck | Glucokinase |
| GlmS | Glucosamine–fructose-6-phosphate aminotransferase, isomerizing |
| GlmM | Phosphoglucosamine mutase |
| MurC | UDP-N-acetylmuramate–alanine ligase |
| MurG | UDP-glucose diacylglycerol glucosyltransferase |
| MurI | Glutamate racemase |
| MurE | UDP-N-acetylmuramoylalanyl-d-glutamate–2,6-diaminopimelate ligase |
| FemA | Formation of the pentaglycine cross bridge |
| FemB | Formation of the pentaglycine cross bridge |
| Pbp2 | Penicillin-binding protein 2, peptidoglycan cross linking |
| SigA | RNA polymerase sigma factor |
| RpoA | DNA-directed RNA polymerase, alpha subunit |
| RpoB | DNA-directed RNA polymerase, beta subunit |
| CodY | GTP-sensing transcriptional pleiotropic repressor |
| SaeR | Response regulator SaeR |
| CcpA | Catabolite control protein A |
| AgrA | Staphylococcal accessory gene regulator A |
| RsbW | Serine-protein kinase RsbW |
Figure 3Molecular events in VISA. Key regulatory proteins and cell wall synthesis processes and their enzymes related to vancomycin resistance in VISA. WTA, wall teichoic acid; LTA, lipoteichoic acid; Glc, glucose; GlcN-6-P, glucosamine-6-phosphate; GlcNAc, N-acetylglucosamine; MurNAc, N-Acetylmuramic acid; DAG, diacylglycerol.