Brunelle Brian W, Bearson Bradley L, Bearson Shawn M D, Casey Thomas A
Food Safety and Enteric Pathogens Research Unit, National Animal Disease Center, ARS, USDA, Ames, Iowa, USA.
Agroecosystems Management Research Unit, National Laboratory for Agriculture and the Environment, ARS, USDA, Ames, Iowa, USA.
mSphere. 2017 Nov 1;2(6). doi: 10.1128/mSphere.00306-17. eCollection 2017 Nov-Dec.
Motile bacteria employ one or more methods for movement, including darting, gliding, sliding, swarming, swimming, and twitching. Multidrug-resistant (MDR) carries acquired genes that provide resistance to specific antibiotics, and the goal of our study was to determine how antibiotics influence swimming and swarming in such resistant isolates. Differences in motility were examined for six MDR serovar Typhimurium isolates grown on swimming and swarming media containing subinhibitory concentrations of chloramphenicol, kanamycin, streptomycin, or tetracycline. Chloramphenicol and tetracycline reduced both swimming and swarming, though the effect was more pronounced for swimming than for swarming at the same antibiotic and concentration. Swimming was limited by kanamycin and streptomycin, but these antibiotics had much less influence on decreasing swarming. Interestingly, kanamycin significantly increased swarming in one of the isolates. Removal of the kanamycin resistance gene and complementation with either the or kanamycin resistance gene revealed that , along with an unidentified genetic factor, was required for the kanamycin-enhanced swarming phenotype. Screening of 25 additional kanamycin-resistant isolates identified two that also had significantly increased swarming motility in the presence of kanamycin. This study demonstrated that many variables influence how antibiotics impact swimming and swarming motility in MDR . Typhimurium, including antibiotic type, antibiotic concentration, antibiotic resistance gene, and isolate-specific factors. Identifying these isolate-specific factors and how they interact will be important to better understand how antibiotics influence MDR motility. is one of the most common causes of bacterial foodborne infections in the United States, and the Centers for Disease Control consider multidrug-resistant (MDR) a "Serious Threat Level pathogen." Because MDR can lead to more severe disease in patients than that caused by antibiotic-sensitive strains, it is important to identify the role that antibiotics may play in enhancing virulence. The current study examined several MDR isolates and determined the effect that various antibiotics had on motility, an important virulence-associated factor. While most antibiotics had a neutral or negative effect on motility, we found that kanamycin actually enhanced MDR swarming in some isolates. Subsequent experiments showed this phenotype as being dependent on a combination of several different genetic factors. Understanding the influence that antibiotics have on MDR motility is critical to the proper selection and prudent use of antibiotics for efficacious treatment while minimizing potential collateral consequences.
运动性细菌采用一种或多种运动方式,包括突进、滑行、滑动、群体运动、游动和颤动。多重耐药(MDR)菌携带获得性基因,使其对特定抗生素产生耐药性,我们研究的目的是确定抗生素如何影响此类耐药菌株的游动和群体运动。研究了六种鼠伤寒血清型MDR菌株在含有亚抑菌浓度氯霉素、卡那霉素、链霉素或四环素的游动和群体运动培养基上生长时的运动性差异。氯霉素和四环素降低了游动和群体运动,不过在相同抗生素和浓度下,对游动的影响比对群体运动更明显。卡那霉素和链霉素限制了游动,但这些抗生素对群体运动减少的影响小得多。有趣的是,卡那霉素显著增加了其中一株菌株的群体运动。去除卡那霉素抗性基因并用野生型或卡那霉素抗性基因进行互补,结果显示,除了一个未鉴定的遗传因素外,卡那霉素增强的群体运动表型还需要[具体基因]。对另外25株卡那霉素抗性菌株进行筛选,发现其中两株在有卡那霉素存在时群体运动性也显著增加。这项研究表明,许多变量会影响抗生素对MDR鼠伤寒菌株游动和群体运动性的影响,包括抗生素类型、抗生素浓度、抗生素抗性基因和菌株特异性因素。确定这些菌株特异性因素及其相互作用方式对于更好地理解抗生素如何影响MDR菌的运动性很重要。鼠伤寒沙门氏菌是美国细菌性食源性感染最常见的病因之一,疾病控制中心将多重耐药鼠伤寒沙门氏菌视为“严重威胁级别病原体”。由于MDR菌比抗生素敏感菌株可导致患者更严重的疾病,因此确定抗生素在增强其毒力方面可能发挥的作用很重要。当前的研究检查了几种MDR菌株,并确定了各种抗生素对鼠伤寒沙门氏菌运动性(一种重要的毒力相关因素)的影响。虽然大多数抗生素对运动性有中性或负面影响,但我们发现卡那霉素实际上增强了一些菌株的MDR群体运动。后续实验表明,这种表型取决于几种不同遗传因素的组合。了解抗生素对MDR菌运动性的影响对于正确选择和谨慎使用抗生素以进行有效治疗同时尽量减少潜在的附带后果至关重要。