Laboratory of Pharmaceutical Microbiology, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
Laboratory for Medicinal Chemistry, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
PLoS Pathog. 2019 Apr 29;15(4):e1007697. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1007697. eCollection 2019 Apr.
Antibiotic susceptibility of bacterial pathogens is typically evaluated using in vitro assays that do not consider the complex host microenvironment. This may help explaining a significant discrepancy between antibiotic efficacy in vitro and in vivo, with some antibiotics being effective in vitro but not in vivo or vice versa. Nevertheless, it is well-known that antibiotic susceptibility of bacteria is driven by environmental factors. Lung epithelial cells enhance the activity of aminoglycoside antibiotics against the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa, yet the mechanism behind is unknown. The present study addresses this gap and provides mechanistic understanding on how lung epithelial cells stimulate aminoglycoside activity. To investigate the influence of the local host microenvironment on antibiotic activity, an in vivo-like three-dimensional (3-D) lung epithelial cell model was used. We report that conditioned medium of 3-D lung cells, containing secreted but not cellular components, potentiated the bactericidal activity of aminoglycosides against P. aeruginosa, including resistant clinical isolates, and several other pathogens. In contrast, conditioned medium obtained from the same cell type, but grown as conventional (2-D) monolayers did not influence antibiotic efficacy. We found that 3-D lung cells secreted endogenous metabolites (including succinate and glutamate) that enhanced aminoglycoside activity, and provide evidence that bacterial pyruvate metabolism is linked to the observed potentiation of antimicrobial activity. Biochemical and phenotypic assays indicated that 3-D cell conditioned medium stimulated the proton motive force (PMF), resulting in increased bacterial intracellular pH. The latter stimulated antibiotic uptake, as determined using fluorescently labelled tobramycin in combination with flow cytometry analysis. Our findings reveal a cross-talk between host and bacterial metabolic pathways, that influence downstream activity of antibiotics. Understanding the underlying basis of the discrepancy between the activity of antibiotics in vitro and in vivo may lead to improved diagnostic approaches and pave the way towards novel means to stimulate antibiotic activity.
细菌病原体的抗生素敏感性通常使用体外测定来评估,而不考虑复杂的宿主微环境。这可能有助于解释抗生素在体外和体内疗效之间的显著差异,一些抗生素在体外有效而在体内无效,或者相反。然而,众所周知,细菌对抗生素的敏感性受环境因素的驱动。肺上皮细胞增强了氨基糖苷类抗生素对机会性病原体铜绿假单胞菌的活性,但背后的机制尚不清楚。本研究解决了这一差距,并提供了关于肺上皮细胞如何刺激氨基糖苷类抗生素活性的机制理解。为了研究局部宿主微环境对抗生素活性的影响,使用了类似于体内的三维(3-D)肺上皮细胞模型。我们报告说,3-D 肺细胞的条件培养基,包含分泌但不包含细胞成分,增强了氨基糖苷类抗生素对铜绿假单胞菌(包括耐药临床分离株和其他几种病原体)的杀菌活性。相比之下,从相同细胞类型获得的条件培养基,但作为常规(2-D)单层生长,并不影响抗生素的疗效。我们发现 3-D 肺细胞分泌内源性代谢物(包括琥珀酸和谷氨酸),增强了氨基糖苷类抗生素的活性,并提供了证据表明细菌丙酮酸代谢与观察到的抗菌活性增强有关。生化和表型测定表明,3-D 细胞条件培养基刺激质子动力势(PMF),导致细菌细胞内 pH 值升高。后者刺激了抗生素的摄取,如通过荧光标记妥布霉素并结合流式细胞术分析来确定。我们的研究结果揭示了宿主和细菌代谢途径之间的相互作用,这些作用影响了抗生素的下游活性。了解抗生素在体外和体内活性之间差异的潜在基础,可能会导致改进诊断方法,并为刺激抗生素活性开辟新途径。