| Literature DB >> 29914953 |
Rubén Monárrez1, Yin Wang1, Yingmei Fu1,2, Chun-Hsing Liao1,3, Ryo Okumura1,4, Molly R Braun1, George A Jacoby5, David C Hooper6.
Abstract
Expression of the quinolone resistance gene qnrS1 is increased by quinolones, but unlike induction of some other qnr genes, the bacterial SOS system is not involved and no lexA box is found upstream. Nonetheless, at least 205 bp of upstream sequence is required for induction to take place. An upstream sequence bound to beads trapped potential binding proteins from cell extracts that were identified by mass spectrometry as Dps, Fis, Ihf, Lrp, CysB, and YjhU. To further elucidate their role, a reporter plasmid linking the qnrS1 upstream sequence to lacZ was introduced into cells of the Keio collection with single-gene deletions and screened for lacZ expression. Mutants in ihfA and ihfB had decreased lacZ induction, while induction in a cysB mutant was increased and dps, fis, lrp, yjhU, and other mutants showed no change. The essential upstream sequence contains potential binding sites for Ihf and DnaA. A dnaA deletion could not be tested because it provides essential functions in cell replication; however, increased dnaA expression decreased qnrS1 induction while decreased dnaA expression enhanced it, implying a role for DnaA as a repressor. In a mobility shift assay, purified IhfA, IhfB, and DnaA proteins (but not CysB) were shown to bind to the upstream segment. Induction decreased in a gyrA quinolone-resistant mutant, indicating that GyrA also has a role. Thus, quinolones acting through proteins DnaA, GyrA, IhfA, and IhfB regulate expression of qnrS1.Entities:
Keywords: antibiotic resistance; plasmid-mediated resistance; quinolones
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29914953 PMCID: PMC6125508 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.00806-18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antimicrob Agents Chemother ISSN: 0066-4804 Impact factor: 5.191