| Literature DB >> 34054749 |
Stephen J Kassinger1, Monique L van Hoek1.
Abstract
Tularemia, caused by Francisella tularensis, is endemic to the northern hemisphere. This zoonotic organism has historically been developed into a biological weapon. For this Tier 1, Category A select agent, it is important to expand our understanding of its mechanisms of antibiotic resistance (AMR). Francisella is unlike many Gram-negative organisms in that it does not have significant plasmid mobility, and does not express AMR mechanisms on plasmids; thus plasmid-mediated resistance does not occur naturally. It is possible to artificially introduce plasmids with AMR markers for cloning and gene expression purposes. In this review, we survey both the experimental research on AMR in Francisella and bioinformatic databases which contain genomic and proteomic data. We explore both the genetic determinants of intrinsic AMR and naturally acquired or engineered antimicrobial resistance as well as phenotypic resistance in Francisella. Herein we survey resistance to beta-lactams, monobactams, carbapenems, aminoglycosides, tetracycline, polymyxins, macrolides, rifampin, fosmidomycin, and fluoroquinolones. We also highlight research about the phenotypic AMR difference between planktonic and biofilm Francisella. We discuss newly developed methods of testing antibiotics against Francisella which involve the intracellular nature of Francisella infection and may better reflect the eventual clinical outcomes for new antibiotic compounds. Understanding the genetically encoded determinants of AMR in Francisella is key to optimizing the treatment of patients and potentially developing new antimicrobials for this dangerous intracellular pathogen.Entities:
Keywords: Francisella; antibiotic drug resistance; antibiotic resistance; biofilm; multidrug resistance; tularemia
Year: 2021 PMID: 34054749 PMCID: PMC8149597 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2021.644855
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Intrinsic antibiotic resistance in Francisella.
| Antibiotic class | Drug name | References | |
| Beta lactam | Penicillin | Resistant | |
| Dihydrofolatereductase inhibitors | Sulfamethoxazole trimethoprim (cotrimoxaole) | Resistant | |
| Polymyxins | Polymyxin B | Resistant | |
| Colistin (polymyxin E) | Resistant | ||
| Macrolides | Erythromycin | Sensitive/resistant (strain dependent) | |
| Macrolide | Azithromycin | Type B—Resistant, Type A—Sensitive | |
| Carbapenems | Various | Sensitive/resistant (strain dependent) | |
| Monobactam | Aztreonam | Sensitive/resistant (strain dependent) | |
| Cephalosporin | Cefotaxime, moxalactam (latamoxef), ceftazidime | Type A—sensitive, Type B—resistant | |
| Aminoglycosides | Streptomycin, gentamicin, amikacin, tobramycin | Sensitive | |
| Kanamycin | Sensitive | ||
| Hygromycin | Sensitive | ||
| Aminoglycoside—aminocyclitol | Spectinomycin | Sensitive | |
| Ansamycins (antimycobacterial) | Rifampicin | Sensitive | |
| DXR (1-deoxy- | Fosmidomycin, FR900098 | Sensitive | |
| Aminoglycosides | Streptomycin, gentamicin | Sensitive | |
| Tetracyclines | Tetracycline, doxycycline | Sensitive | |
| Fluoroquinolones | Ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin | Sensitive |
The annotated PBP gene in Francisella species and subspecies using KEGG database.
| Locus (KEGG orthology) name [E.C. number], other information | Locus (KEGG orthology) name [E.C. number], other information | Locus (KEGG orthology) name [E.C. number], other information | |
| FTT_0697 (K03587) | FTL_1539 (K03587) cell division protein FtsI (penicillin-binding protein 3) [EC:3.4.16.4] penicillin-binding protein (peptidoglycan synthetase) | FTN_0607 (K03587) cell division protein FtsI (penicillin-binding protein 3) [EC:3.4.16.4] | |
| FTT_1039 (K07259) serine-type D-Ala-D-Ala carboxypeptidase/endopeptidase (penicillin-binding protein 4) [EC:3.4.16.4 3.4.21.-] | | FTL_1046 (K07259) Serine-type D-Ala-D-Ala carboxypeptidase/endopeptidase (penicillin-binding protein 4) [EC:3.4.16.4 3.4.21.-] D-alanyl-D-alanine carboxypeptidase (Penicillin-binding protein) family protein | FTN_0917 (K07259) Serine-type D-Ala-D-Ala carboxypeptidase/endopeptidase (penicillin-binding protein 4) [EC:3.4.16.4 3.4.21.-] serine-type D-Ala-D-Ala carboxypeptidase | |
| No homolog found | FTL_1509 D-alanyl-D-alanine carboxypeptidase/D-alanyl-D-alanine-endopeptidase | FTN_0635 (K07259) serine-type D-Ala-D-Ala carboxypeptidase/endopeptidase (penicillin-binding protein 4) [EC:3.4.16.4 3.4.21.-] serine-type D-Ala-D-Ala carboxypeptidase | |
| FTT_1029 (K07258) | FTL_1060 (K07258) serine-type D-Ala-D-Ala carboxypeptidase (penicillin-binding protein 5/6) [EC:3.4.16.4] | (GenBank) D-alanyl-D-alanine carboxypeptidase (penicillin-binding protein) family protein | FTN_0907 (K07258) serine-type D-Ala-D-Ala carboxypeptidase (penicillin-binding protein 5/6) [EC:3.4.16.4] | |
| FTT_1540c (K07337) penicillin-binding protein activator hypothetical protein | FTL_0571 (K07337) penicillin-binding protein activator, conserved hypothetical protein | FTN_1449 (K07337) penicillin-binding protein activator, conserved protein of unknown function |
Putative AmpG permease homologs (MFS protein) in Francisella (selected genes from Uniprot.org).
| Locus and gene names | Organism | Uniprot entry | Protein names | Length |
| A0Q8D4 | Peptide-acetyl-coenzyme A transporter (PAT) family protein | 421 | ||
| A0A0B3WLC8 | AmpG family muropeptide MFS transporter | 421 | ||
| Q5NIJ7 | Major facilitator superfamily (MFS) transport protein | 421 |
The annotated efflux pumps in Francisella species and subspecies.
| Locus (KEGG orthology, Uniprot) name [E.C. number], other information | Locus (KEGG orthology, Uniprot) name [E.C. number], other information | Locus (KEGG orthology, Uniprot) name [E.C. number], other information | |
| FTT_1724c (K12340) | FTL_1865 (K12340) | FTN_1703 (K12340, A0Q8J5) | |
| FTT_0106c (K03585) | FTL_1671 (K03585) | FTN_1609 (K03585, A0Q8A4), RND family efflux transporter, MFP subunit. MexAB-OprM [MD:M00718] | |
| FTT_0105c transporter AcrB/AcrD/AcrF family | FTL_1672 ( | FTN_1610 (K18138, A0Q8A5) AcrB/AcrD/AcrF family | |
| FTT_1095c | FTL_1107 | FTN_0779 | |
| FTT_1258 | FTL_0686 ( | FTN_1277 | |
| FTT_1257 (K03543) | FTL_0687 (K03543) ( | FTN_1276 (K03543) | |
| FTT_1256 (K03446) | FTL_0688 (K03446) ( | FTN_1275 (K03446) | |
| Efflux transporter, RND family, MFP subunit. | FTT_0747c, hypothetical protein (261 aa), HlyD_D23 domain | FTL_1366 (partial, 105 aa) | FTN_0718 (Uniprot A0Q5U5), (285 aa), membrane fusion protein |
| FTN_0799 | |||
| FTT_0853 | Not found | FTN_0382 (A0Q4X0) FTN_0800 | |
| FTT_0868c | FTL_0370 | FTN_0395 FTN_0801 | |
FIGURE 1Annotated efflux pump genes in Francisella. The membrane fusion proteins AcrA and EmrA1 proteins are shown in blue, the plasma membrane fusion proteins AcrB and EmrB in Green, and outer membrane proteins TolC, SilC, and FtlC in pink. SilC may also pair with EmrA1 and EmrB, especially as they are co-localized in the chromosome. Known trimers illustrated as such. Figure created using BioRender (https://biorender.com/).
Identification of putative tetracycline resistance genes (Tet) in most strains of Francisella (selected data from Uniprot.org).
| Gene locus number | Organism | UniProt entry | NCBI-ProteinID | Protein names | Protein length |
| Q5NHK9 | YP_169483 | Multidrug transporter MFS_1 (tetracycline resistance protein) | 412 | ||
| A0A0B3VY25 | CAJ80061 | MFS transporter (Sugar (And other) transporter family protein) | 408 | ||
| A0Q5B5 | ABK89430 | Drug:H+ antiporter-1 (DHA1) family protein | 408 |
Putative polymyxin resistance genes in Francisella (selected data from Uniprot.org and Kegg.jp).
| Locus (gene) names | Organism | UniProt entry | Phenotype | Protein names | Length | References |
| A0Q4N6 | Polymyxin Sensitivity | Lipid A 4’-phosphatase | 222 | |||
| Q5NEJ5 | Hypothetical Protein | 222 | ||||
| Q2A1R7 | Hypothetical Membrane Protein | 222 | ||||
| AEE26563 | 587 | |||||
| Q5NHJ9 (YP_169493) | Dolichyl-phosphate-mannose-protein mannosyltransferase family protein | 587 | ||||
| A0Q5C6 | Dolichyl-phosphate-mannose-protein mannosyltransferase family protein | 587 | ||||
| CAJ80048 | Dolichyl-phosphate-mannose-protein mannosyltransferase family protein | 586 | ||||
| F4BGH0 | 317 | |||||
| Q5NHK0 | Glycosyl transferase, group 2 family protein | 318 | ||||
| A0Q5C5 | Glycosyl transferase, group 2 | 318 | ||||
| A0A0B6E7W3 (CAJ80050) | Glycosyl transferase, group 2 family protein | 317 | ||||
FIGURE 2DNA gyrase in Francisella, showing critical residues. The Francisella tularensis tularensis ScuS4 GyrA (A), GyrB (B), and ParE (C) amino acid sequences were used in conjugation with SwissModel (Schwede et al., 2003) to generate three-dimensional protein models. The model of each with the highest global model quality estimation score is presented here in orange. On each model, mutations leading to enhanced resistance were mapped. Blue indicates a substitution of residue, red a deletion, green an insertion after the indicated residue, and magenta either a deletion or a substitution at that residue. Protein models were built in SWISS-MODEL and illustrated in Geneious (Schwede et al., 2003; Kearse et al., 2012).
FIGURE 3Model for screening method to identify lipophilic, fosmidomycin-derived analogs effective against intracellular pathogens. Figure used under Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) license (McKenney et al., 2012). In this system, the mammalian cell (orange line) is infected with intracellular bacteria (purple line), F. novicida (green GlpT protein), or F. novicida glpT mutant (red GlpT protein) separately. We demonstrated that the drug fosmidomycin is dependent on GlpT transporter to reach its intracellular target (DXR) in Francisella. This model demonstrates how we can use a mutant in a drug transporter in Francisella (blue cell) to screen for fosmidomycin analogs and prodrugs that act (i) independently of that transporter and (ii) are lipophilic and (iii) able to pass through both a bacterial membrane and (iv) a eukaryotic host cell membrane. Shown here is the difference between the parent compound fosmidomycin, which can pass through the host cell membrane, but requires Francisella GlpT to enter the bacteria, vs a lipophilic analog, which can pass through the host cell membrane and the bacterial cell membrane and can act on the drug target (DXR). The library of fosmidomycin analog candidates was first generated by testing candidate molecules against recombinant purified Francisella DXR in vitro (Jawaid et al., 2009). This intracellular model is constructed by infecting host cells with a glpT mutant of Francisella, and then screening a library of fosmidomycin analogs for inhibition of Francisella growth comparing the wild-type F. novicida vs the glpT mutant F. novicida for intracellular replication (123).