Department of Biomedical Informatics, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States of America.
Center for Evolutionary Biology and Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States of America.
PLoS Pathog. 2024 Aug 29;20(8):e1012422. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1012422. eCollection 2024 Aug.
Vancomycin has proven remarkably durable to resistance evolution by Staphylococcus aureus despite widespread treatment with vancomycin in the clinic. Only 16 cases of vancomycin-resistant S. aureus (VRSA) have been documented in the United States. It is thought that the failure of VRSA to spread is partly due to the fitness cost imposed by the vanA operon, which is the only known means of high-level resistance. Here, we show that the fitness cost of vanA-mediated resistance can be overcome through laboratory evolution of VRSA in the presence of vancomycin. Adaptation to vancomycin imposed a tradeoff such that fitness in the presence of vancomycin increased, while fitness in its absence decreased in evolved lineages. Comparing the genomes of vancomycin-exposed and vancomycin-unexposed lineages pinpointed the D-alanine:D-alanine ligase gene (ddl) as the target of loss-of-function mutations, which were associated with the observed fitness tradeoff. Vancomycin-exposed lineages exhibited vancomycin dependence and abnormal colony morphology in the absence of drug, which were associated with mutations in ddl. However, further evolution of vancomycin-exposed lineages in the absence of vancomycin enabled some evolved lineages to escape this fitness tradeoff. Many vancomycin-exposed lineages maintained resistance in the absence of vancomycin, unlike their ancestral VRSA strains. These results indicate that VRSA might be able to compensate for the fitness deficit associated with vanA-mediated resistance, which may pose a threat to the prolonged durability of vancomycin in the clinic. Our results also suggest vancomycin treatment should be immediately discontinued in patients after VRSA is identified to mitigate potential adaptations.
万古霉素已被证明对金黄色葡萄球菌的耐药性进化具有很强的抵抗力,尽管万古霉素在临床上广泛应用。在美国,仅记录了 16 例耐万古霉素金黄色葡萄球菌(VRSA)的病例。人们认为,VRSA 未能传播的部分原因是 vanA 操纵子带来的适应度代价,这是已知的高水平耐药的唯一手段。在这里,我们表明,通过在存在万古霉素的情况下对 VRSA 进行实验室进化,可以克服 vanA 介导的耐药性的适应度代价。适应万古霉素会产生权衡,即万古霉素存在时的适应度增加,而不存在时的适应度在进化谱系中降低。比较暴露于万古霉素和未暴露于万古霉素的谱系的基因组,确定了 D-丙氨酸:D-丙氨酸连接酶基因(ddl)是功能丧失突变的靶标,这些突变与观察到的适应度权衡有关。暴露于万古霉素的谱系在没有药物的情况下表现出对万古霉素的依赖性和异常菌落形态,这与 ddl 中的突变有关。然而,在没有万古霉素的情况下,进一步进化暴露于万古霉素的谱系使一些进化谱系能够逃避这种适应度权衡。许多暴露于万古霉素的谱系在没有万古霉素的情况下仍能保持耐药性,这与它们的祖先 VRSA 菌株不同。这些结果表明,VRSA 可能能够补偿与 vanA 介导的耐药性相关的适应度缺陷,这可能对万古霉素在临床上的长期耐久性构成威胁。我们的研究结果还表明,一旦确定了 VRSA,就应立即停止对患者使用万古霉素治疗,以减轻潜在的适应。