Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 2 de 2
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
mSystems ; 5(6)2020 Dec 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33361328

ABSTRACT

The rapid horizontal transmission of antibiotic resistance genes on conjugative plasmids between bacterial host cells is a major cause of the accelerating antibiotic resistance crisis. There are currently no experimental platforms for fast and cost-efficient screening of genetic effects on antibiotic resistance transmission by conjugation, which prevents understanding and targeting conjugation. We introduce a novel experimental framework to screen for conjugation-based horizontal transmission of antibiotic resistance between >60,000 pairs of cell populations in parallel. Plasmid-carrying donor strains are constructed in high-throughput. We then mix the resistance plasmid-carrying donors with recipients in a design where only transconjugants can reproduce, measure growth in dense intervals, and extract transmission times as the growth lag. As proof-of-principle, we exhaustively explore chromosomal genes controlling F-plasmid donation within Escherichia coli populations, by screening the Keio deletion collection in high replication. We recover all seven known chromosomal gene mutants affecting conjugation as donors and identify many novel mutants, all of which diminish antibiotic resistance transmission. We validate nine of the novel genes' effects in liquid mating assays and complement one of the novel genes' effect on conjugation (rseA). The new framework holds great potential for exhaustive disclosing of candidate targets for helper drugs that delay resistance development in patients and societies and improve the longevity of current and future antibiotics. Further, the platform can easily be adapted to explore interspecies conjugation, plasmid-borne factors, and experimental evolution and be used for rapid construction of strains.IMPORTANCE The rapid transmission of antibiotic resistance genes on conjugative plasmids between bacterial host cells is a major cause of the accelerating antibiotic resistance crisis. There are currently no experimental platforms for fast and cost-efficient screening of genetic effects on antibiotic resistance transmission by conjugation, which prevents understanding and targeting conjugation. We introduce a novel experimental framework to screen for conjugation-based horizontal transmission of antibiotic resistance between >60,000 pairs of cell populations in parallel. As proof-of-principle, we exhaustively explore chromosomal genes controlling F-plasmid donation within E. coli populations. We recover all previously known and many novel chromosomal gene mutants that affect conjugation efficiency. The new framework holds great potential for rapid screening of compounds that decrease transmission. Further, the platform can easily be adapted to explore interspecies conjugation, plasmid-borne factors, and experimental evolution and be used for rapid construction of strains.

2.
Int J Pharm ; 587: 119646, 2020 Sep 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32679261

ABSTRACT

Limited and poor delivery of antibiotics is cited as one reason for the difficulty in treating antibiotic-resistant biofilms associated with chronic infections. We investigate the effectiveness of a positively charged, single isomer cyclodextrin derivative, octakis[6-(2-aminoethylthio)-6-deoxy]-γ-CD (γCys) to improve the delivery of antibiotics to biofilms. Using multiphoton laser scanning microscopy complemented with super-resolution fluorescence microscopy, we showed that γCys tagged with fluorescein (FITC) is uniformly distributed throughout live S. epidermidis biofilm cultures in vitro and results suggest it is localized extracellularly in the biofilm matrix. NMR spectroscopic data in aqueous solution confirm that γCys forms inclusion complexes with both the antibiotics oxacillin and rifampicin. Efficacy of γCys/antibiotic (oxacillin and rifampicin) was measured in the biofilms. While treatment with γCys/oxacillin had little improvement over oxacillin alone, γCys/rifampicin reduced the biofilm viability to background levels demonstrating a remarkable improvement over rifampicin alone. The strong synergistic effect for γCys/rifampicin is at this stage not clearly understood, but plausible explanations are related to increased solubility of rifampicin upon complexation and/or synergistic interference with components of the biofilm. The results demonstrate that designed cyclodextrin nanocarriers, like γCys, efficiently deliver suitable antibiotics to biofilms and that fluorescence microscopy offers a novel approach for mechanistic investigations.


Subject(s)
Staphylococcus epidermidis , gamma-Cyclodextrins , Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Biofilms , Cysteamine , Microbial Sensitivity Tests , Microscopy, Fluorescence
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...