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Unstable Mechanisms of Resistance to Inhibitors of Escherichia coli Lipoprotein Signal Peptidase

Authors :
Homer Pantua
Elizabeth Skippington
Marie-Gabrielle Braun
Cameron L. Noland
Jingyu Diao
Yutian Peng
Susan L. Gloor
Donghong Yan
Jing Kang
Anand Kumar Katakam
Janina Reeder
Georgette M. Castanedo
Keira Garland
Laszlo Komuves
Meredith Sagolla
Cary D. Austin
Jeremy Murray
Yiming Xu
Zora Modrusan
Min Xu
Emily J. Hanan
Sharookh B. Kapadia
Source :
mBio, Vol 11, Iss 5 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
American Society for Microbiology, 2020.

Abstract

ABSTRACT Clinical development of antibiotics with novel mechanisms of action to kill pathogenic bacteria is challenging, in part, due to the inevitable emergence of resistance. A phenomenon of potential clinical importance that is broadly overlooked in preclinical development is heteroresistance, an often-unstable phenotype in which subpopulations of bacterial cells show decreased antibiotic susceptibility relative to the dominant population. Here, we describe a new globomycin analog, G0790, with potent activity against the Escherichia coli type II signal peptidase LspA and uncover two novel resistance mechanisms to G0790 in the clinical uropathogenic E. coli strain CFT073. Building on the previous finding that complete deletion of Lpp, the major Gram-negative outer membrane lipoprotein, leads to globomycin resistance, we also find that an unexpectedly modest decrease in Lpp levels mediated by insertion-based disruption of regulatory elements is sufficient to confer G0790 resistance and increase sensitivity to serum killing. In addition, we describe a heteroresistance phenotype mediated by genomic amplifications of lspA that result in increased LspA levels sufficient to overcome inhibition by G0790 in culture. These genomic amplifications are highly unstable and are lost after as few as two subcultures in the absence of G0790, which places amplification-containing resistant strains at high risk of being misclassified as susceptible by routine antimicrobial susceptibility testing. In summary, our study uncovers two vastly different mechanisms of resistance to LspA inhibitors in E. coli and emphasizes the importance of considering the potential impact of unstable and heterogenous phenotypes when developing antibiotics for clinical use. IMPORTANCE Despite increasing evidence suggesting that antibiotic heteroresistance can lead to treatment failure, the significance of this phenomena in the clinic is not well understood, because many clinical antibiotic susceptibility testing approaches lack the resolution needed to reliably classify heteroresistant strains. Here we present G0790, a new globomycin analog and potent inhibitor of the Escherichia coli type II signal peptidase LspA. We demonstrate that in addition to previously known mechanisms of resistance to LspA inhibitors, unstable genomic amplifications containing lspA can lead to modest yet biologically significant increases in LspA protein levels that confer a heteroresistance phenotype.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21507511
Volume :
11
Issue :
5
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
mBio
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.7dc0127d394ca78d233d455e860331
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.02018-20