| Literature DB >> 29389876 |
Damien J Cabral1, Jenna I Wurster2, Peter Belenky3.
Abstract
Persistence is a phenomenon during which a small fraction of a total bacterial population survives treatment with high concentrations of antibiotics for an extended period of time. In conjunction with biofilms, antibiotic persisters represent a major cause of recalcitrant and recurring infections, resulting in significant morbidity and mortality. In this review, we discuss the clinical significance of persister cells and the central role of bacterial metabolism in their formation, specifically with respect to carbon catabolite repression, sugar metabolism, and growth regulation. Additionally, we will examine persister formation as an evolutionary strategy used to tolerate extended periods of stress and discuss some of the response mechanisms implicated in their formation. To date, the vast majority of the mechanistic research examining persistence has been conducted in artificial in vitro environments that are unlikely to be representative of host conditions. Throughout this review, we contextualize the existing body of literature by discussing how in vivo conditions may create ecological niches that facilitate the development of persistence. Lastly, we identify how the development of next-generation sequencing and other "big data" tools may enable researchers to examine persistence mechanisms within the host to expand our understanding of their clinical importance.Entities:
Keywords: biofilms; metabolism; next-generation sequencing; persistence; tolerance
Year: 2018 PMID: 29389876 PMCID: PMC5874710 DOI: 10.3390/ph11010014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Figure 1Utilization of next-generation technologies for studying persister cells. (A) Both human patients and murine models provide an opportunity to study in vivo persister formation via 16S rRNA profiling, community metagenomics, and RNA-Seq of the intestinal flora following antibiotic exposure. Single-organism persister formation can be studied in vivo through animal infection with high-density transposon insertion libraries and Tn-Seq. (B) Metagenomic and RNA-Seq data can be used to study selective pressure on persister genes in either closely related or divergent taxa. This can be done in retrospective clinical cohort groupings or in animal model infections over the course of antibiotic therapy, identifying how certain therapeutic regimens can select for the expression of specific (red) or ubiquitous (blue) persister elements. (C) Persisters can be studied from either in vitro-generated biofilms or patient biopsy-derived biofilms. Persister-specific Fluorescence In-Situ Hybridization (FISH) labeling can allow for visualization and study of persisters within the 3D context of the biofilm, and laser-capture microdissection (LCMD) sectioning can facilitate labeled cell extraction for downstream transcriptomic analyses.