Barbosa Camilo, Trebosc Vincent, Kemmer Christian, Rosenstiel Philip, Beardmore Robert, Schulenburg Hinrich, Jansen Gunther
Evolutionary Ecology and Genetics, Zoological Institute, CAU Kiel, Kiel, Germany.
BioVersys AG, Basel, Switzerland.
Mol Biol Evol. 2017 Sep 1;34(9):2229-2244. doi: 10.1093/molbev/msx158.
When bacteria evolve resistance against a particular antibiotic, they may simultaneously gain increased sensitivity against a second one. Such collateral sensitivity may be exploited to develop novel, sustainable antibiotic treatment strategies aimed at containing the current, dramatic spread of drug resistance. To date, the presence and molecular basis of collateral sensitivity has only been studied in few bacterial species and is unknown for opportunistic human pathogens such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa. In the present study, we assessed patterns of collateral effects by experimentally evolving 160 independent populations of P. aeruginosa to high levels of resistance against eight commonly used antibiotics. The bacteria evolved resistance rapidly and expressed both collateral sensitivity and cross-resistance. The pattern of such collateral effects differed to those previously reported for other bacterial species, suggesting interspecific differences in the underlying evolutionary trade-offs. Intriguingly, we also identified contrasting patterns of collateral sensitivity and cross-resistance among the replicate populations adapted to the same drug. Whole-genome sequencing of 81 independently evolved populations revealed distinct evolutionary paths of resistance to the selective drug, which determined whether bacteria became cross-resistant or collaterally sensitive towards others. Based on genomic and functional genetic analysis, we demonstrate that collateral sensitivity can result from resistance mutations in regulatory genes such as nalC or mexZ, which mediate aminoglycoside sensitivity in β-lactam-adapted populations, or the two-component regulatory system gene pmrB, which enhances penicillin sensitivity in gentamicin-resistant populations. Our findings highlight substantial variation in the evolved collateral effects among replicates, which in turn determine their potential in antibiotic therapy.
当细菌对某一特定抗生素产生耐药性时,它们可能同时对另一种抗生素的敏感性增强。这种协同敏感性可被用于开发新的、可持续的抗生素治疗策略,以遏制当前耐药性的急剧传播。迄今为止,协同敏感性的存在及其分子基础仅在少数细菌物种中得到研究,而对于诸如铜绿假单胞菌等机会性人类病原体来说仍是未知的。在本研究中,我们通过实验使160个独立的铜绿假单胞菌群体进化出对八种常用抗生素的高水平耐药性,从而评估了协同效应模式。这些细菌迅速进化出耐药性,并表现出协同敏感性和交叉耐药性。这种协同效应的模式与先前报道的其他细菌物种不同,表明潜在进化权衡存在种间差异。有趣的是,我们还在适应同一种药物的重复群体中发现了协同敏感性和交叉耐药性的对比模式。对81个独立进化群体的全基因组测序揭示了对选择性药物耐药的不同进化路径,这些路径决定了细菌是对其他药物产生交叉耐药性还是协同敏感性。基于基因组和功能基因分析,我们证明协同敏感性可能源于调节基因(如nalC或mexZ)中的耐药突变,这些基因在适应β-内酰胺类药物的群体中介导氨基糖苷类药物敏感性,或者源于双组分调节系统基因pmrB,该基因在耐庆大霉素的群体中增强青霉素敏感性。我们的研究结果突出了重复群体中进化出的协同效应存在很大差异,而这反过来又决定了它们在抗生素治疗中的潜力。