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1.
Nat Microbiol ; 8(11): 2196-2212, 2023 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37770760

ABSTRACT

Drug combinations can expand options for antibacterial therapies but have not been systematically tested in Gram-positive species. We profiled ~8,000 combinations of 65 antibacterial drugs against the model species Bacillus subtilis and two prominent pathogens, Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pneumoniae. Thereby, we recapitulated previously known drug interactions, but also identified ten times more novel interactions in the pathogen S. aureus, including 150 synergies. We showed that two synergies were equally effective against multidrug-resistant S. aureus clinical isolates in vitro and in vivo. Interactions were largely species-specific and synergies were distinct from those of Gram-negative species, owing to cell surface and drug uptake differences. We also tested 2,728 combinations of 44 commonly prescribed non-antibiotic drugs with 62 drugs with antibacterial activity against S. aureus and identified numerous antagonisms that might compromise the efficacy of antimicrobial therapies. We identified even more synergies and showed that the anti-aggregant ticagrelor synergized with cationic antibiotics by modifying the surface charge of S. aureus. All data can be browsed in an interactive interface ( https://apps.embl.de/combact/ ).


Subject(s)
Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus , Staphylococcus aureus , Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Gram-Positive Bacteria , Drug Combinations
2.
PLoS Biol ; 21(8): e3002198, 2023 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37594988

ABSTRACT

Pathogenic bacteria proliferating inside mammalian host cells need to rapidly adapt to the intracellular environment. How they achieve this and scavenge essential nutrients from the host has been an open question due to the difficulties in distinguishing between bacterial and host metabolites in situ. Here, we capitalized on the inability of mammalian cells to metabolize mannitol to develop a stable isotopic labeling approach to track Salmonella enterica metabolites during intracellular proliferation in host macrophage and epithelial cells. By measuring label incorporation into Salmonella metabolites with liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS), and combining it with metabolic modeling, we identify relevant carbon sources used by Salmonella, uncover routes of their metabolization, and quantify relative reaction rates in central carbon metabolism. Our results underline the importance of the Entner-Doudoroff pathway (EDP) and the phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase for intracellularly proliferating Salmonella. More broadly, our metabolic labeling strategy opens novel avenues for understanding the metabolism of pathogens inside host cells.


Subject(s)
Salmonella enterica , Salmonella , Animals , Carbon , Chromatography, Liquid , Isotopes , Mammals
3.
Mol Syst Biol ; 18(9): e10490, 2022 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36124745

ABSTRACT

Dose-response relationships are a general concept for quantitatively describing biological systems across multiple scales, from the molecular to the whole-cell level. A clinically relevant example is the bacterial growth response to antibiotics, which is routinely characterized by dose-response curves. The shape of the dose-response curve varies drastically between antibiotics and plays a key role in treatment, drug interactions, and resistance evolution. However, the mechanisms shaping the dose-response curve remain largely unclear. Here, we show in Escherichia coli that the distinctively shallow dose-response curve of the antibiotic trimethoprim is caused by a negative growth-mediated feedback loop: Trimethoprim slows growth, which in turn weakens the effect of this antibiotic. At the molecular level, this feedback is caused by the upregulation of the drug target dihydrofolate reductase (FolA/DHFR). We show that this upregulation is not a specific response to trimethoprim but follows a universal trend line that depends primarily on the growth rate, irrespective of its cause. Rewiring the feedback loop alters the dose-response curve in a predictable manner, which we corroborate using a mathematical model of cellular resource allocation and growth. Our results indicate that growth-mediated feedback loops may shape drug responses more generally and could be exploited to design evolutionary traps that enable selection against drug resistance.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents , Tetrahydrofolate Dehydrogenase , Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Escherichia coli/genetics , Feedback , Tetrahydrofolate Dehydrogenase/genetics , Tetrahydrofolate Dehydrogenase/pharmacology , Trimethoprim/pharmacology
4.
Nature ; 609(7925): 144-150, 2022 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35850148

ABSTRACT

Retrons are prokaryotic genetic retroelements encoding a reverse transcriptase that produces multi-copy single-stranded DNA1 (msDNA). Despite decades of research on the biosynthesis of msDNA2, the function and physiological roles of retrons have remained unknown. Here we show that Retron-Sen2 of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium encodes an accessory toxin protein, STM14_4640, which we renamed as RcaT. RcaT is neutralized by the reverse transcriptase-msDNA antitoxin complex, and becomes active upon perturbation of msDNA biosynthesis. The reverse transcriptase is required for binding to RcaT, and the msDNA is required for the antitoxin activity. The highly prevalent RcaT-containing retron family constitutes a new type of tripartite DNA-containing toxin-antitoxin system. To understand the physiological roles of such toxin-antitoxin systems, we developed toxin activation-inhibition conjugation (TAC-TIC), a high-throughput reverse genetics approach that identifies the molecular triggers and blockers of toxin-antitoxin systems. By applying TAC-TIC to Retron-Sen2, we identified multiple trigger and blocker proteins of phage origin. We demonstrate that phage-related triggers directly modify the msDNA, thereby activating RcaT and inhibiting bacterial growth. By contrast, prophage proteins circumvent retrons by directly blocking RcaT. Consistently, retron toxin-antitoxin systems act as abortive infection anti-phage defence systems, in line with recent reports3,4. Thus, RcaT retrons are tripartite DNA-regulated toxin-antitoxin systems, which use the reverse transcriptase-msDNA complex both as an antitoxin and as a sensor of phage protein activities.


Subject(s)
Antitoxins , Bacteriophages , Retroelements , Salmonella typhimurium , Toxin-Antitoxin Systems , Antitoxins/genetics , Bacteriophages/metabolism , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , DNA, Single-Stranded/genetics , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Prophages/metabolism , RNA-Directed DNA Polymerase/metabolism , Retroelements/genetics , Salmonella typhimurium/genetics , Salmonella typhimurium/growth & development , Salmonella typhimurium/virology , Toxin-Antitoxin Systems/genetics
5.
Mol Syst Biol ; 17(2): e10188, 2021 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33590968

ABSTRACT

The severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is a global threat to human health and has compromised economic stability. In addition to the development of an effective vaccine, it is imperative to understand how SARS-CoV-2 hijacks host cellular machineries on a system-wide scale so that potential host-directed therapies can be developed. In situ proteome-wide abundance and thermal stability measurements using thermal proteome profiling (TPP) can inform on global changes in protein activity. Here we adapted TPP to high biosafety conditions amenable to SARS-CoV-2 handling. We discovered pronounced temporal alterations in host protein thermostability during infection, which converged on cellular processes including cell cycle, microtubule and RNA splicing regulation. Pharmacological inhibition of host proteins displaying altered thermal stability or abundance during infection suppressed SARS-CoV-2 replication. Overall, this work serves as a framework for expanding TPP workflows to globally important human pathogens that require high biosafety containment and provides deeper resolution into the molecular changes induced by SARS-CoV-2 infection.


Subject(s)
COVID-19/metabolism , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Protein Stability , SARS-CoV-2/physiology , Viral Proteins/metabolism , Antiviral Agents/pharmacology , COVID-19/virology , Humans , Proteome , SARS-CoV-2/isolation & purification , SARS-CoV-2/metabolism , Temperature , Virus Replication/drug effects
6.
Nature ; 588(7838): 473-478, 2020 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33299184

ABSTRACT

Recent developments in high-throughput reverse genetics1,2 have revolutionized our ability to map gene function and interactions3-6. The power of these approaches depends on their ability to identify functionally associated genes, which elicit similar phenotypic changes across several perturbations (chemical, environmental or genetic) when knocked out7-9. However, owing to the large number of perturbations, these approaches have been limited to growth or morphological readouts10. Here we use a high-content biochemical readout, thermal proteome profiling11, to measure the proteome-wide protein abundance and thermal stability in response to 121 genetic perturbations in Escherichia coli. We show that thermal stability, and therefore the state and interactions of essential proteins, is commonly modulated, raising the possibility of studying a protein group that is particularly inaccessible to genetics. We find that functionally associated proteins have coordinated changes in abundance and thermal stability across perturbations, owing to their co-regulation and physical interactions (with proteins, metabolites or cofactors). Finally, we provide mechanistic insights into previously determined growth phenotypes12 that go beyond the deleted gene. These data represent a rich resource for inferring protein functions and interactions.


Subject(s)
Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Protein Stability , Proteome/metabolism , Proteomics/methods , Temperature , Enzyme Activation , Escherichia coli/enzymology , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli Proteins/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial , Mutant Proteins/genetics , Mutant Proteins/metabolism , Mutation , Phenotype , Proteome/genetics , Reverse Genetics
7.
Mol Syst Biol ; 15(2): e8470, 2019 02 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30765425

ABSTRACT

Sudden stress often triggers diverse, temporally structured gene expression responses in microbes, but it is largely unknown how variable in time such responses are and if genes respond in the same temporal order in every single cell. Here, we quantified timing variability of individual promoters responding to sublethal antibiotic stress using fluorescent reporters, microfluidics, and time-lapse microscopy. We identified lower and upper bounds that put definite constraints on timing variability, which varies strongly among promoters and conditions. Timing variability can be interpreted using results from statistical kinetics, which enable us to estimate the number of rate-limiting molecular steps underlying different responses. We found that just a few critical steps control some responses while others rely on dozens of steps. To probe connections between different stress responses, we then tracked the temporal order and response time correlations of promoter pairs in individual cells. Our results support that, when bacteria are exposed to the antibiotic nitrofurantoin, the ensuing oxidative stress and SOS responses are part of the same causal chain of molecular events. In contrast, under trimethoprim, the acid stress response and the SOS response are part of different chains of events running in parallel. Our approach reveals fundamental constraints on gene expression timing and provides new insights into the molecular events that underlie the timing of stress responses.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Escherichia coli/genetics , Oxidative Stress/genetics , SOS Response, Genetics/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial/drug effects , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial/genetics , Microfluidics/methods , Oxidative Stress/drug effects , Single-Cell Analysis/methods
8.
Cell Syst ; 4(4): 393-403.e5, 2017 04 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28342718

ABSTRACT

Antibiotics elicit drastic changes in microbial gene expression, including the induction of stress response genes. While certain stress responses are known to "cross-protect" bacteria from other stressors, it is unclear whether cellular responses to antibiotics have a similar protective role. By measuring the genome-wide transcriptional response dynamics of Escherichia coli to four antibiotics, we found that trimethoprim induces a rapid acid stress response that protects bacteria from subsequent exposure to acid. Combining microfluidics with time-lapse imaging to monitor survival and acid stress response in single cells revealed that the noisy expression of the acid resistance operon gadBC correlates with single-cell survival. Cells with higher gadBC expression following trimethoprim maintain higher intracellular pH and survive the acid stress longer. The seemingly random single-cell survival under acid stress can therefore be predicted from gadBC expression and rationalized in terms of GadB/C molecular function. Overall, we provide a roadmap for identifying the molecular mechanisms of single-cell cross-protection between antibiotics and other stressors.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Cell Survival/drug effects , Escherichia coli K12/drug effects , NADH Dehydrogenase/genetics , Stress, Physiological , Cellular Microenvironment , Escherichia coli K12/genetics , Escherichia coli K12/physiology , Gene Deletion , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial/drug effects , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Microfluidics , Time-Lapse Imaging
9.
Environ Microbiol Rep ; 6(6): 545-57, 2014 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25756107

ABSTRACT

Antibiotics affect bacterial cell physiology at many levels. Rather than just compensating for the direct cellular defects caused by the drug, bacteria respond to antibiotics by changing their morphology, macromolecular composition, metabolism, gene expression and possibly even their mutation rate. Inevitably, these processes affect each other, resulting in a complex response with changes in the expression of numerous genes. Genome-wide approaches can thus help in gaining a comprehensive understanding of bacterial responses to antibiotics. In addition, a combination of experimental and theoretical approaches is needed for identifying general principles that underlie these responses. Here, we review recent progress in our understanding of bacterial responses to antibiotics and their combinations, focusing on effects at the levels of growth rate and gene expression. We concentrate on studies performed in controlled laboratory conditions, which combine promising experimental techniques with quantitative data analysis and mathematical modeling. While these basic research approaches are not immediately applicable in the clinic, uncovering the principles and mechanisms underlying bacterial responses to antibiotics may, in the long term, contribute to the development of new treatment strategies to cope with and prevent the rise of resistant pathogenic bacteria.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Bacteria/drug effects , Bacteria/genetics , Bacteria/growth & development , Bacteria/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial/drug effects
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