Cell and Molecular Biology Program, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR, USA.
Department of Biology, College of Education, Salahaddin University, Erbil, Kurdistan, Iraq.
BMC Genomics. 2018 Aug 14;19(1):610. doi: 10.1186/s12864-018-4986-1.
The molecular mechanisms underlying bacterial cell death due to stresses or bactericidal antibiotics are complex and remain puzzling. Due to the current crisis of antibiotic resistance, development of effective antibiotics is urgently required. Previously, it has been shown that iron is required for effective killing of bacterial cells by numerous bactericidal antibiotics.
We investigated the death or growth inhibition of S. Typhimurium under iron-restricted conditions, following disruption of essential genes, by transposon mutagenesis using transposon sequencing (Tn-seq). Our high-resolution Tn-seq analysis revealed that transposon mutants of S. Typhimurium with insertions in essential genes escaped immediate killing or growth inhibition under iron-restricted conditions for approximately one-third of all previously known essential genes. Based on this result, we classified all essential genes into two categories, iron-dependent essential genes, for which the insertion mutants can grow slowly if iron is restricted, and iron-independent essential genes, for which the mutants become nonviable regardless of iron concentration. The iron-dependency of the iron-dependent essential genes was further validated by the fact that the relative abundance of these essential gene mutants increased further with more severe iron restrictions. Our unexpected observation can be explained well by the common killing mechanisms of bactericidal antibiotics via production of reactive oxygen species (ROS). In this model, iron restriction would inhibit production of ROS, leading to reduced killing activity following blocking of essential gene functions. Interestingly, the targets of most antibiotics currently in use clinically are iron-dependent essential genes.
Our result suggests that targeting iron-independent essential genes may be a better strategy for future antibiotic development, because blocking their essential gene functions would lead to immediate cell death regardless of the iron concentration. This work expands our knowledge on the role of iron to a broad range of essential functions and pathways, providing novel insights for development of more effective antibiotics.
由于压力或杀菌抗生素,细菌细胞死亡的分子机制复杂且令人费解。由于目前抗生素耐药性的危机,迫切需要开发有效的抗生素。以前已经表明,许多杀菌抗生素有效地杀死细菌细胞需要铁。
我们通过转座子测序(Tn-seq)用转座子诱变研究了在缺铁条件下必需基因中断后,鼠伤寒沙门氏菌的死亡或生长抑制。我们的高分辨率 Tn-seq 分析表明,在缺铁条件下,插入必需基因中的转座子突变体会逃避立即的杀伤或生长抑制,这约占所有先前已知的必需基因的三分之一。基于这一结果,我们将所有必需基因分为两类,铁依赖性必需基因,其插入突变体在缺铁时可以缓慢生长,以及铁非依赖性必需基因,无论铁浓度如何,突变体都无法存活。这些必需基因的铁依赖性通过以下事实进一步验证:这些必需基因突变体的相对丰度随着铁限制的加剧而进一步增加。我们的意外观察结果可以很好地解释杀菌抗生素通过产生活性氧物质(ROS)的常见杀伤机制。在这种模型中,铁限制会抑制 ROS 的产生,从而导致在阻断必需基因功能后杀伤活性降低。有趣的是,目前临床上使用的大多数抗生素的靶标都是铁依赖性必需基因。
我们的结果表明,靶向铁非依赖性必需基因可能是未来抗生素开发的更好策略,因为阻断其必需基因功能会导致细胞立即死亡,而与铁浓度无关。这项工作扩展了我们对铁在广泛的必需功能和途径中的作用的认识,为开发更有效的抗生素提供了新的见解。