生物
细菌
胃肠道
抗生素
微生物学
抗生素耐药性
殖民抵抗
遗传学
生物化学
作者
Marinelle Rodrigues,Parastoo Sabaeifard,Muhammed Sadik Yildiz,A. L. Lyon,Laura Coughlin,Sara Ahmed,Nicole Poulides,Ahmet Toprak,Cassie L. Behrendt,Xiaoyu Wang,Marguerite L. Monogue,Jiwoong Kim,Shuheng Gan,Xiaowei Zhan,Laura Filkins,Noelle S. Williams,Lora V. Hooper,Andrew Y. Koh,Erdal Toprak
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.chom.2024.01.012
摘要
Summary
Antibiotic resistance and evasion are incompletely understood and complicated by the fact that murine interval dosing models do not fully recapitulate antibiotic pharmacokinetics in humans. To better understand how gastrointestinal bacteria respond to antibiotics, we colonized germ-free mice with a pan-susceptible genetically barcoded Escherichia coli clinical isolate and administered the antibiotic cefepime via programmable subcutaneous pumps, allowing closer emulation of human parenteral antibiotic dynamics. E. coli was only recovered from intestinal tissue, where cefepime concentrations were still inhibitory. Strikingly, "some" E. coli isolates were not cefepime resistant but acquired mutations in genes involved in polysaccharide capsular synthesis increasing their invasion and survival within human intestinal cells. Deleting wbaP involved in capsular polysaccharide synthesis mimicked this phenotype, allowing increased invasion of colonocytes where cefepime concentrations were reduced. Additionally, "some" mutant strains exhibited a persister phenotype upon further cefepime exposure. This work uncovers a mechanism allowing "select" gastrointestinal bacteria to evade antibiotic treatment.
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