| Literature DB >> 33463026 |
Jung-Ho Shin1,2, Donghui Choe3,4, Brett Ransegnola1,2, Hye-Rim Hong1,2, Ikenna Onyekwere1,2, Trevor Cross1,2, Qiaojuan Shi5, Byung-Kwan Cho3,4,6, Lars F Westblade7,8, Ilana L Brito5, Tobias Dörr1,2,9.
Abstract
Bactericidal antibiotics are powerful agents due to their ability to convert essential bacterial functions into lethal processes. However, many important bacterial pathogens are remarkably tolerant against bactericidal antibiotics due to inducible damage repair responses. The cell wall damage response two-component system VxrAB of the gastrointestinal pathogen Vibrio cholerae promotes high-level β-lactam tolerance and controls a gene network encoding highly diverse functions, including negative control over multiple iron uptake systems. How this system contributes to tolerance is poorly understood. Here, we show that β-lactam antibiotics cause an increase in intracellular free iron levels and collateral oxidative damage, which is exacerbated in the ∆vxrAB mutant. Mutating major iron uptake systems dramatically increases ∆vxrAB tolerance to β-lactams. We propose that VxrAB reduces antibiotic-induced toxic iron and concomitant metabolic perturbations by downregulating iron uptake transporters and show that iron sequestration enhances tolerance against β-lactam therapy in a mouse model of cholera infection. Our results suggest that a microorganism's ability to counteract diverse antibiotic-induced stresses promotes high-level antibiotic tolerance and highlights the complex secondary responses elicited by antibiotics.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990Vibrio choleraezzm321990; antibiotic tolerance; cell envelope; stress response; two-component system
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33463026 PMCID: PMC7857431 DOI: 10.15252/embr.202051790
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EMBO Rep ISSN: 1469-221X Impact factor: 8.807