Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01476-17
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dc.titleTuning of the lethal response to multiple stressors with a single-site mutation during clinical infection by staphylococcus aureus
dc.contributor.authorKumar, K
dc.contributor.authorChen, J
dc.contributor.authorDrlica, K
dc.contributor.authorShopsin, B
dc.date.accessioned2020-11-17T04:38:46Z
dc.date.available2020-11-17T04:38:46Z
dc.date.issued2017
dc.identifier.citationKumar, K, Chen, J, Drlica, K, Shopsin, B (2017). Tuning of the lethal response to multiple stressors with a single-site mutation during clinical infection by staphylococcus aureus. mBio 8 (5) : e01476-17. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01476-17
dc.identifier.issn2161-2129
dc.identifier.urihttps://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/183503
dc.description.abstractThe agr system of Staphylococcus aureus promotes invasion of host tissues, and as expected, agents that block agr quorum sensing have anti-infective properties. Paradoxically, agr-defective mutants are frequently recovered from patients, especially those persistently infected with S. aureus. We found that an agr deficiency increased survival of cultured bacteria during severe stress, such as treatment with gentamicin, ciprofloxacin, heat, or low pH. With daptomycin, deletion of agr decreased survival. Therefore, agr activity can be either detrimental or protective, depending on the type of lethal stress. Deletion of agr had no effect on the ability of the antimicrobials to block bacterial growth, indicating that agr effects are limited to lethal action. Thus, the effect of an agr deletion is on bacterial tolerance, not resistance. For gentamicin and daptomycin, activity can be altered by agr-regulated secreted factors. For ciprofloxacin, a detrimental function was downregula-tion of glutathione peroxidase (bsaA), an enzyme responsible for defense against oxidative stress. Deficiencies in agr and bsaA were epistatic for survival, consistent with agr having a destructive role mediated by reactive oxygen species. Enhanced susceptibility to lethal stress by wild-type agr, particularly antimicrobial stress, helps explain why inactivating mutations in S. aureus agr commonly occur in hospitalized patients during infection. Moreover, the agr quorum-sensing system of S. aureus provides a clinically relevant example in which a single-step change in the response to severe stress alters the evolutionary path of a pathogen during infection. IMPORTANCE When phenotypes produced in response to an environmental stress are inadequate to buffer against that stress, changes that do buffer may become genetically encoded by natural selection. A clinically relevant example is seen with S. aureus mutants that are deficient in the key virulence regulator agr. Paradoxically, defects in agr are selected during serious hospital infection and have been associated with worse outcome. The current work helps resolve this paradox: agr mutants are often less readily killed by lethal stressors without affecting MIC, a phenomenon known as tolerance. Our results indicate that tolerance, which would not be detected as resistance, can be selected in clinical settings. The data also support the ideas that (i) S. aureus broadly hedges against environmental change and stress through genome plasticity, (ii) reactive oxygen can be involved in the self-destructive response in bacteria, and (iii) therapeutic targeting of agr and virulence can be counterproductive. © 2017 Kumar et al.
dc.publisherAmerican Society for Microbiology
dc.rightsAttribution 4.0 International
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.sourceUnpaywall 20201031
dc.subjectciprofloxacin
dc.subjectdaptomycin
dc.subjectgentamicin
dc.subjectglutathione peroxidase
dc.subjectoxacillin
dc.subjectreactive oxygen metabolite
dc.subjectantiinfective agent
dc.subjectbacterial protein
dc.subjectciprofloxacin
dc.subjectdaptomycin
dc.subjecttransactivator protein
dc.subjectagr gene
dc.subjectantibiotic resistance
dc.subjectArticle
dc.subjectbacterial gene
dc.subjectbacterial growth
dc.subjectbacterial mutation
dc.subjectbacterial survival
dc.subjectbacterial virulence
dc.subjectbacterium culture
dc.subjectcontrolled study
dc.subjectdown regulation
dc.subjectdrug tolerance
dc.subjectenvironmental stress
dc.subjectgene deletion
dc.subjectgene mutation
dc.subjectheat stress
dc.subjectnonhuman
dc.subjectoxidative stress
dc.subjectpH
dc.subjectpriority journal
dc.subjectquorum sensing
dc.subjectStaphylococcus aureus
dc.subjectStaphylococcus infection
dc.subjectstress
dc.subjectbacterial genome
dc.subjectcross infection
dc.subjectgene expression regulation
dc.subjectgenetics
dc.subjecthuman
dc.subjectmetabolism
dc.subjectmicrobiology
dc.subjectmutation
dc.subjectphysiological stress
dc.subjectStaphylococcus aureus
dc.subjectStaphylococcus infection
dc.subjectvirulence
dc.subjectAnti-Bacterial Agents
dc.subjectBacterial Proteins
dc.subjectCiprofloxacin
dc.subjectCross Infection
dc.subjectDaptomycin
dc.subjectGene Expression Regulation, Bacterial
dc.subjectGenome, Bacterial
dc.subjectHumans
dc.subjectMutation
dc.subjectQuorum Sensing
dc.subjectStaphylococcal Infections
dc.subjectStaphylococcus aureus
dc.subjectStress, Physiological
dc.subjectTrans-Activators
dc.subjectVirulence
dc.typeArticle
dc.contributor.departmentMICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY
dc.description.doi10.1128/mBio.01476-17
dc.description.sourcetitlemBio
dc.description.volume8
dc.description.issue5
dc.description.pagee01476-17
dc.published.statePublished
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