Nägeli Michelle, Rodriguez Shade, Iradukunda Aimee, Manson Abigail L, Earl Ashlee M, Brennan-Krohn Thea
Department of Pathology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Infectious Disease and Microbiome Program, Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.
Microbiol Spectr. 2025 Jun 12:e0324124. doi: 10.1128/spectrum.03241-24.
Avibactam (AVI) is a diazabicyclooctane (DBO) β-lactamase inhibitor used clinically in combination with ceftazidime. At concentrations higher than those typically achieved , it also has broad-spectrum direct antibacterial activity against strains, including metallo-β-lactamase-producing isolates, mediated by inhibition of penicillin-binding protein 2 (PBP2). This activity has some mechanistic similarities to that of more potent novel DBOs (zidebactam and nacubactam) in late clinical development. We found that resistance to AVI emerged readily, with a mutation frequency of 2 × 10 to 8 × 10. Whole-genome sequencing of resistant isolates revealed a heterogeneous mutational target that permitted bacterial survival and replication despite PBP2 inhibition, in line with prior studies of PBP2-targeting drugs. While such mutations are believed to act by upregulating the bacterial stringent response, we found a similarly high mutation frequency in bacteria deficient in components of the stringent response, although we observed a different set of mutations in these strains. Although avibactam-resistant strains had increased lag time, suggesting a fitness cost that might render them less problematic in clinical infections, there was no statistically significant difference in growth rates between susceptible and resistant strains. The finding of rapid emergence of resistance to avibactam as the result of a large and complex mutational target adds to our understanding of resistance to PBP2-targeting drugs and has potential implications for novel DBOs with potent direct antibacterial activity, which are being developed with the goal of expanding cell wall-active treatment options for multidrug-resistant gram-negative infections.IMPORTANCEAvibactam (AVI) is the first in a class of novel β-lactamase inhibitor antibiotics called diazabicyclooctanes (DBOs). In addition to its ability to inhibit bacterial β-lactamase enzymes that can destroy β-lactam antibiotics, we found that AVI had direct antibacterial activity, at concentrations higher than those used clinically, against even highly multidrug-resistant bacteria. This activity is the result of inhibition of the bacterial enzyme penicillin-binding protein 2 (PBP2). Resistance to other drugs that inhibit PBP2 occurs through mutations that involve upregulation of the bacterial "stringent response" to stress. We found that bacteria developed resistance to AVI at a high rate, as a result of mutations in stringent response genes. We also found that bacteria with impairments in the stringent response could still develop resistance to AVI through different mutations. Our findings indicate the importance of studying how resistance will emerge to newer, more potent DBOs in development and early clinical use.
阿维巴坦(AVI)是一种二氮杂双环辛烷(DBO)β-内酰胺酶抑制剂,临床上与头孢他啶联合使用。在高于通常达到的浓度时,它还对多种菌株具有广谱直接抗菌活性,包括产金属β-内酰胺酶的分离株,其作用机制是抑制青霉素结合蛋白2(PBP2)。这种活性在机制上与处于临床开发后期的更有效的新型DBO(齐德巴坦和那库巴坦)有一些相似之处。我们发现,对阿维巴坦的耐药性很容易出现,突变频率为2×10至8×10。对耐药分离株进行全基因组测序发现了一个异质性突变靶点,尽管PBP2受到抑制,但该靶点仍能使细菌存活和复制,这与之前针对PBP2的药物研究一致。虽然据信此类突变是通过上调细菌的严谨反应来起作用的,但我们发现在缺乏严谨反应成分的细菌中,突变频率同样很高,不过我们在这些菌株中观察到了不同的一组突变。尽管耐阿维巴坦菌株的延滞期增加,这表明存在一种适合度代价,可能使它们在临床感染中问题较小,但敏感菌株和耐药菌株之间的生长速率在统计学上没有显著差异。由于存在一个大而复杂的突变靶点,阿维巴坦耐药性迅速出现,这一发现加深了我们对针对PBP2的药物耐药性的理解,并对具有强效直接抗菌活性的新型DBO具有潜在影响,这些新型DBO正在开发中,目标是为多重耐药革兰氏阴性菌感染扩大细胞壁活性治疗选择。重要性阿维巴坦(AVI)是一类名为二氮杂双环辛烷(DBO)的新型β-内酰胺酶抑制剂抗生素中的首个药物。除了能够抑制可破坏β-内酰胺抗生素的细菌β-内酰胺酶外,我们发现,在高于临床使用浓度时,阿维巴坦对甚至高度多重耐药细菌也具有直接抗菌活性。这种活性是抑制细菌酶青霉素结合蛋白2(PBP2)的结果。对其他抑制PBP2的药物产生耐药性是通过涉及上调细菌对压力的“严谨反应”的突变实现的。我们发现,由于严谨反应基因发生突变,细菌对阿维巴坦产生耐药性的速率很高。我们还发现,严谨反应受损的细菌仍可通过不同的突变对阿维巴坦产生耐药性。我们的研究结果表明,研究在开发和早期临床使用中,针对更新、更有效的DBO将如何出现耐药性具有重要意义。