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Recurrent emergence of Klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenem resistance mediated by an inhibitory ompK36 mRNA secondary structure

Authors :
Joshua L. C. Wong
Sophia David
Julia Sanchez-Garrido
Jia Z. Woo
Wen Wen Low
Fabio Morecchiato
Tommaso Giani
Gian Maria Rossolini
Konstantinos Beis
Stephen J. Brett
Abigail Clements
David M. Aanensen
Silvi Rouskin
Gad Frankel
Wellcome Trust
Medical Research Council (MRC)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
National Academy of Sciences, 2022.

Abstract

Outer membrane porins in Gram-negative bacteria facilitate antibiotic influx. In Klebsiella pneumoniae , modifications in the porin OmpK36 are implicated in increasing resistance to carbapenems. An analysis of large K. pneumoniae genome collections, encompassing major healthcare-associated clones, revealed the recurrent emergence of a synonymous cytosine-to-thymine transition at position 25 (25c > t) in ompK36. We show that the 25c > t transition increases carbapenem resistance through depletion of OmpK36 from the outer membrane. The mutation attenuates K. pneumoniae in a murine pneumonia model, which accounts for its limited clonal expansion observed by phylogenetic analysis. However, in the context of carbapenem treatment, the 25c > t transition tips the balance toward treatment failure, thus accounting for its recurrent emergence. Mechanistically, the 25c > t transition mediates an intramolecular messenger RNA (mRNA) interaction between a uracil encoded by 25t and the first adenine within the Shine–Dalgarno sequence. This specific interaction leads to the formation of an RNA stem structure, which obscures the ribosomal binding site thus disrupting translation. While mutations reducing OmpK36 expression via transcriptional silencing are known, we uniquely demonstrate the repeated selection of a synonymous ompK36 mutation mediating translational suppression in response to antibiotic pressure.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....847586ae1fc8a6724afe79b544b6f06e