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Having your cake and eating it - Staphylococcus aureus small colony variants can evolve faster growth rate without losing their antibiotic resistance

机译:吃蛋糕并食用-金黄色葡萄球菌小菌落变种可以加快生长速度而不会失去对抗生素的抵抗力

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摘要

Staphylococcus aureus can produce small colony variants (SCVs) during infections. These cause significant clinical problems because they are difficult to detect in standard microbiological screening and are associated with persistent infections. The major causes of the SCV phenotype are mutations that inhibit respiration by inactivation of genes of the menadione or hemin biosynthesis pathways. This reduces the production of ATP required to support fast growth. Importantly, it also decreases cross-membrane potential in SCVs, resulting in decreased uptake of cationic compounds, with reduced susceptibility to aminoglycoside antibiotics as a consequence. Because SCVs are slow-growing (mutations in men genes are associated with growth rates in rich medium ~30% of the wild-type growth rate) bacterial cultures are very susceptible to rapid takeover by faster-growing mutants (revertants or suppressors). In the case of reversion, the resulting fast growth is obviously associated with the loss of antibiotic resistance. However, direct reversion is relatively rare due to the very small genetic target size for such mutations. We explored the phenotypic consequences of SCVs evolving faster growth by routes other than direct reversion, and in particular whether any of those routes allowed for the maintenance of antibiotic resistance. In a recent paper (mBio 8: e00358-17) we demonstrated the existence of several different routes of SCV evolution to faster growth, one of which maintained the antibiotic resistance phenotype. This discovery suggests that SCVs might be more adaptable and problematic that previously thought. They are capable of surviving as a slow-growing persistent form, before evolving into a significantly faster-growing form without sacrificing their antibiotic resistance phenotype.
机译:金黄色葡萄球菌可在感染过程中产生小的菌落变异体(SCV)。这些引起严重的临床问题,因为它们很难在标准的微生物筛查中检测到并且与持续感染相关。 SCV表型的主要原因是突变,通过突变甲萘醌或血红素生物合成途径的基因来抑制呼吸。这减少了支持快速增长所需的ATP产量。重要的是,它也降低了SCV中的跨膜电位,导致阳离子化合物的吸收减少,结果降低了对氨基糖苷类抗生素的敏感性。由于SCV的生长缓慢(男性基因突变与野生型生长率的30%左右的丰富培养基中的生长率相关),细菌培养物非常容易受到生长较快的突变体(回复子或抑制子)的快速接管。在逆转的情况下,产生的快速生长显然与抗生素抗性的丧失有关。但是,由于此类突变的遗传靶标很小,因此直接回复相对较少。我们探讨了SCV的表型后果,即通过直接逆转以外的途径发展更快的生长,尤其是这些途径中是否有任何途径能够维持抗生素抗性。在最近的一篇论文(mBio 8:e00358-17)中,我们证明了SCV进化到更快生长的几种不同途径,其中一种途径保持了抗生素抗性表型。这一发现表明,SCV可能比以前认为的更具适应性和问题性。它们能够以缓慢生长的持久形式生存,然后演变成明显更快的生长形式而不会牺牲其抗生素抗性表型。

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