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1.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother ; 65(8): e0028121, 2021 07 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34097492

ABSTRACT

Bacteria have a repertoire of strategies to overcome antibiotics in clinical use, complicating our ability to treat and cure infectious diseases. In addition to evolving resistance, bacteria within genetically clonal cultures can undergo transient phenotypic changes and tolerate high doses of antibiotics. These cells, termed persisters, exhibit heterogeneous phenotypes; the strategies that a bacterial population deploys to overcome one class of antibiotics can be distinct from those needed to survive treatment with drugs with another mode of action. It was previously reported that fluoroquinolones, which target DNA topoisomerases, retain the capacity to kill nongrowing bacteria that tolerate other classes of antibiotics. Here, we show that in Escherichia coli stationary-phase cultures and colony biofilms, persisters that survive treatment with the anionic fluoroquinolone delafloxacin depend on the AcrAB-TolC efflux pump. In contrast, we did not detect this dependence on AcrAB-TolC in E. coli persisters that survive treatment with three other fluoroquinolone compounds. We found that the loss of AcrAB-TolC activity via genetic mutations or chemical inhibition not only reduces delafloxacin persistence in nongrowing E. coli MG1655 or EDL933 (an E. coli O157:H7 strain), but it limits resistance development in progenies derived from delafloxacin persisters that were given the opportunity to recover in nutritive medium following antibiotic treatment. Our findings highlight the heterogeneity in defense mechanisms that persisters use to overcome different compounds within the same class of antibiotics. They further indicate that efflux pump inhibitors can potentiate the activity of delafloxacin against stationary-phase E. coli and block resistance development in delafloxacin persister progenies.


Subject(s)
Escherichia coli Proteins , Escherichia coli , Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Carrier Proteins , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Escherichia coli Proteins/genetics , Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , Fluoroquinolones/pharmacology
2.
Cell Signal ; 75: 109750, 2020 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32846197

ABSTRACT

Antibiotics have vastly improved our quality of life since their discovery and introduction into modern medicine. Yet, widespread use and misuse have compromised the efficacy of these compounds and put our ability to cure infectious diseases in jeopardy. To defend themselves against antibiotics, bacteria have evolved an arsenal of survival strategies. In addition to acquiring mutations and genetic determinants that confer antibiotic resistance, bacteria can respond to environmental cues and adopt reversible phenotypic changes that transiently enhance their ability to survive adverse conditions, including those brought on by antibiotics. These antibiotic tolerant and persistent bacteria, which are prevalent in biofilms and can survive antimicrobial therapy without inheriting resistance, are thought to underlie treatment failure and infection relapse. At infection sites, bacteria encounter a range of signals originating from host immunity and the local microbiota that can induce transcriptomic and metabolic reprogramming. In this review, we will focus on the impact of host factors and microbial interactions on antibiotic tolerance and persistence. We will also outline current efforts in leveraging the knowledge of host-microbe and microbe-microbe interactions in designing therapies that potentiate antibiotic activity and reduce the burden caused by recurrent infections.


Subject(s)
Bacteria , Drug Resistance, Bacterial , Host Microbial Interactions , Social Networking , Animals , Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Bacteria/drug effects , Bacteria/immunology , Humans
3.
Trends Parasitol ; 32(10): 755-757, 2016 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27255527

ABSTRACT

For eukaryotic genomes, DNA synthesis initiates at multiple discrete regions known as replication origins in a dynamic yet regulated manner to ensure genomic stability. Two recent studies using different approaches reveal few Leishmania origins and that origin firing may proceed in a mainly stochastic manner.


Subject(s)
DNA Replication Timing , Genomic Instability , Leishmania/genetics , Animals , Drug Delivery Systems , Humans , Leishmaniasis/parasitology , Leishmaniasis/prevention & control , Replication Origin/genetics
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