Back to Search Start Over

Polymyxins Bind to the Cell Surface of Unculturable Acinetobacter baumannii and Cause Unique Dependent Resistance

Authors :
Zhu, Y
Lu, J
Han, M-L
Jiang, X
Azad, MAK
Patil, NA
Lin, Y-W
Zhao, J
Hu, Y
Yu, HH
Chen, K
Boyce, JD
Dunstan, RA
Lithgow, T
Barlow, CK
Li, W
Schneider-Futschik, EK
Wang, J
Gong, B
Sommer, B
Creek, DJ
Fu, J
Wang, L
Schreiber, F
Velkov, T
Li, J
Zhu, Y
Lu, J
Han, M-L
Jiang, X
Azad, MAK
Patil, NA
Lin, Y-W
Zhao, J
Hu, Y
Yu, HH
Chen, K
Boyce, JD
Dunstan, RA
Lithgow, T
Barlow, CK
Li, W
Schneider-Futschik, EK
Wang, J
Gong, B
Sommer, B
Creek, DJ
Fu, J
Wang, L
Schreiber, F
Velkov, T
Li, J
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Multidrug-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii is a top-priority pathogen globally and polymyxins are a last-line therapy. Polymyxin dependence in A. baumannii (i.e., nonculturable on agar without polymyxins) is a unique and highly-resistant phenotype with a significant potential to cause treatment failure in patients. The present study discovers that a polymyxin-dependent A. baumannii strain possesses mutations in both lpxC (lipopolysaccharide biosynthesis) and katG (reactive oxygen species scavenging) genes. Correlative multiomics analyses show a significantly remodeled cell envelope and remarkably abundant phosphatidylglycerol in the outer membrane (OM). Molecular dynamics simulations and quantitative membrane lipidomics reveal that polymyxin-dependent growth emerges only when the lipopolysaccharide-deficient OM distinctively remodels with ≥ 35% phosphatidylglycerol, and with "patch" binding on the OM by the rigid polymyxin molecules containing strong intramolecular hydrogen bonding. Rather than damaging the OM, polymyxins bind to the phosphatidylglycerol-rich OM and strengthen the membrane integrity, thereby protecting bacteria from external reactive oxygen species. Dependent growth is observed exclusively with polymyxin analogues, indicating a critical role of the specific amino acid sequence of polymyxins in forming unique structures for patch-binding to bacterial OM. Polymyxin dependence is a novel antibiotic resistance mechanism and the current findings highlight the risk of 'invisible' polymyxin-dependent isolates in the evolution of resistance.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1315708226
Document Type :
Electronic Resource