| Literature DB >> 33194805 |
Helen Morcrette1, Andrea Kovacs-Simon1, Richard K Tennant1, John Love1, Sariqa Wagley1, Zheng R Yang1, David J Studholme1, Orkun S Soyer2, Olivia L Champion1, Clive S Butler1, Richard W Titball1.
Abstract
The formation of persister cells is one mechanism by which bacteria can survive exposure to environmental stresses. We show that Campylobacter jejuni 11168H forms persister cells at a frequency of 10-3 after exposure to 100 × MIC of penicillin G for 24 h. Staining the cell population with a redox sensitive fluorescent dye revealed that penicillin G treatment resulted in the appearance of a population of cells with increased fluorescence. We present evidence, to show this could be a consequence of increased redox protein activity in, or associated with, the electron transport chain. These data suggest that a population of penicillin G treated C. jejuni cells could undergo a remodeling of the electron transport chain in order to moderate membrane hyperpolarization and intracellular alkalization; thus reducing the antibiotic efficacy and potentially assisting in persister cell formation.Entities:
Keywords: Campylobacter jejuni; antibiotic; electron transport; persister cell; proteomics
Year: 2020 PMID: 33194805 PMCID: PMC7641608 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2020.565975
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Figure 1Cell populations following the addition of penicillin G to 14 h old cultures of C. jejuni 11168H. A log phase culture (14 h) of C. jejuni was incubated for 24 h with 100 × the MIC of penicillin G. Results shown are the mean of three replicates with bars corresponding to the standard error of the mean shown at each data point. ****p < 0.0001 (unpaired t-test).
Figure 2FACS profiles of C. jejuni 11168H after staining with RSG. Three biological replicates of each of the following: A log phase (14 h growth) C. jejuni culture (T0), a log phase culture incubated for a further 24 h in MHB (control + 24 h MHB) and a log phase culture incubated for a further 24 h in MHB containing 100 × MIC of penicillin G (+ 24 h Penicillin G), were stained with Redox Sensor Green (RSG). The stained cultures were then analyzed by FACS. Fluorescence intensity of RSG stained C. jejuni cells at 530 ± 30 nm (x-axis) after excitation with a 488 nm laser is plotted against bacterial cell count (y-axis). Different populations of cells were gated according to the intensity of the RSG fluorescence of each population (P1–stained, P2–brightly stained, and P3–unstained).
Top 20 proteins significantly over-produced (left hand side) or under-produced (right hand side) in C. jejuni cells that strained brightly with RSG after exposure to 100 × MIC of penicillin G for 24 h.
| Cj0755 | Ferric enterobactin uptake receptor | 12.4733 | Cj1430c | dTDP-4-dehydrorhamnose 3,5-epimerase | ∞ | ||
| Cj1039 | UDP-N-acetylglucosamine–N-acetylmuramyl-(pentapeptide) pyrophosphoryl-undecaprenol N-acetylglucosamine transferase | 7.8637 | Cj1567c | NADH-quinone oxidoreductase I subunit M | 0.0225 | ||
| Cj0367c | Multidrug efflux pump protein CmeA | 4.7408 | Cj1685c | Biotin synthase | 0.0282 | ||
| Cj0926 | Membrane protein | 4.1717 | Cj1378 | L-seryl-tRNA(Sec) selenium transferase | 0.0415 | ||
| Cj0365c | Multidrug efflux pump protein CmeC | 3.9992 | Cj0117 | Aminodeoxyfutalosine nucleosidase | 0.056 | ||
| Cj1357c | Cytochrome c nitrite reductase cytochrome c552 subunit | 3.8977 | Cj0314 | Diaminopimelate decarboxylase | 0.0587 | ||
| Cj0318 | Flagellar MS-ring protein | 3.7812 | Cj0002 | DNA polymerase III subunit beta | 0.0627 | ||
| Cj0946 | Lipoprotein | 3.6892 | Cj1725 | Periplasmic protein | 0.0859 | ||
| Cj0842 | Lipoprotein | 3.6419 | Cj1171c | Peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase | 0.0899 | ||
| Cj0329c | Phosphate acyltransferase | 3.4946 | Cj1315c | Imidazole glycerol phosphate synthase subunit HisH | 0.0975 | ||
| Cj1215 | Peptidase M23 family protein | 3.4565 | Cj1720 | Hypothetical protein Cj1720 | 0.1062 | ||
| Cj0277 | Rod shape-determining protein MreC | 3.3915 | Cj0405 | Shikimate 5-dehydrogenase | 0.1123 | ||
| Cj1573c | NADH-quinone oxidoreductase subunit G | 3.3741 | Cj1041c | ATP/GTP-binding protein | 0.1129 | ||
| Cj0508 | Penicillin G-binding protein | 3.2216 | Cj1250 | Phosphoribosylamine–glycine ligase | 0.1131 | ||
| Cj0151c | Periplasmic protein | 3.1399 | Cj1670c | Glycoprotein CpgA | 0.1286 | ||
| Cj1207c | Lipoprotein thiredoxin | 3.1258 | Cj1601 | 1-(5-phosphoribosyl)-5 | 0.1415 | ||
| Cj0268c | Transmembrane protein | 3.1233 | Cj0440c | Transcriptional regulator | 0.1449 | ||
| Cj0734c | Histidine-binding protein | 3.0803 | Cj0234c | Ribosome recycling factor | 0.1472 | ||
| Cj0090 | Lipoprotein | 3.0552 | Cj1516 | Oxidoreductase | 0.158 | ||
| Cj0853c | Glutamate-1-semialdehyde aminotransferase | 2.8635 | Cj0014c | Integral membrane protein | 0.159 | ||
The proteome of these cells was compared to the proteome of a control culture not exposed to antibiotic. The proteins listed showed an abundance change of 2-fold or more and the q value was < 0.05.
Figure 3Functional COG categories of differentially produced proteins in penicillin G treated C. jejuni cells compared to untreated cells. Only significant produced proteins (q < 0.05) with abundance changes of 2-fold or more are shown.