Antibiotic fitness and acquired resistance are the two critical factors when bacteria respond to antibiotics, and the correlations and mechanisms between these two factors remain largely unknown. In this study, a TMT-labeling-based quantitative proteomics method was used to compare the differential expression of proteins between the fitness and acquired resistance to chlortetracycline in Aeromonas hydrophila biofilm. Bioinformatics analysis showed that translation-related ribosomal proteins, such as 30s ribosome subunits, increased in both factors; fatty acid biosynthesis related proteins, such as FabB, FabD, FabG, AccA, and AccD, increased in biofilm fitness, and some pathways (including propanoate-metabolism-related protein, such as PrpB, AtoB, PflB, AcsA, PrpD, and GabT) displayed decreased abundance in acquired resistance biofilm. The varieties of selected proteins involved in fatty acid biosynthesis and propanoate metabolism were further validated by q-PCR assay or Western blotting. Furthermore, the antibiotic-resistance-function assays showed that fatty-acid biosynthesis should be a protective antibiotics-resistance mechanism and a cocktail of chlortetracycline and triclosan, a fatty-acid-biosynthesis inhibitor, exhibited more efficient antimicrobial capability than did each antibiotic individually on biofilm, specifically on chlortetracycline-sensitive biofilm. We therefore demonstrate that the up-regulation of fatty acid biosynthesis may play an important role in antibiotic resistance and suggest that a cocktail of chlortetracycline and triclosan may be a potential cocktail therapy for pathogenic infections in biofilm.
Lysine acetylation and succinylation are both prevalent protein post-translational modifications (PTMs) in bacteria species, whereas the effect of the cross-talk between both PTMs on bacterial biological function remains largely unknown. Our previously study found lysine succinylated sites on proteins play important role on metabolic pathways in fish pathogenic Aeromonas hydrophila. A total of 3189 lysine-acetylation sites were further identified on 1013 proteins of this pathogen using LC-MS/MS in this study. Functional examination of these PTMs peptides showed associations with basal biological processes, especially metabolic pathways. Additionally, when comparing the obtained lysine acetylome to a previously obtained lysine succinylome, 1198 sites in a total of 547 proteins were found to be in common and associated with various metabolic pathways. As the autoinducer-2 (AI-2) synthase involved in quorum sensing of bacteria, the site-directed mutagenesis of LuxS at the K165 site was performed and revealed that the cross-talk between lysine acetylation and succinylation exerts an inverse influence on bacterial quorum sensing and on LuxS enzymatic activity. In summary, this study provides an in-depth A. hydrophila lysine acetylome profile and for the first time reveals the role of cross-talk between lysine acetylation and succinylation, and its potential impact on bacterial physiological functions.
Quorum sensing (QS) is an important protective mechanism that allows bacteria to adapt to its environment. A limited number of signal molecules play the key role of transmitting information in this mechanism. Signals are transmitted between individual bacterium through QS systems, resulting in the expression of specific genes. QS plays an important role in a variety of bacterial processes, including drug resistance, biofilm formation, motility, adherence, and virulence. Most Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria possess QS systems, mainly the LuxS/AI-2-mediated QS system. Evidence has been brought that LuxS/AI-2 system controls major virulence determinants in Streptococcus suis and, as such, the ability of this bacterial species to cause infections in humans and pigs. Understanding the S. suis LuxS/AI-2 system may open up novel avenues for decreasing the drug resistance and infectivity of S. suis. This article focuses on the progress made to date on the S. suis LuxS/AI-2-mediated QS system.
Streptococcus suis (S. suis) is a major swine pathogen and an important zoonotic agent. Like most pathogens, the ability of S. suis to form biofilms plays a significant role in its virulence and drug resistance. A better understanding of the mechanisms involved in biofilm formation by S. suis as well as of the methods to efficiently remove and kill biofilm-embedded bacteria can be of high interest for the prevention and treatment of S. suis infections. The aim of this literature review is to update our current knowledge of S. suis biofilm formation, regulatory mechanisms, drug-resistance mechanisms, and disinfection strategies.
We have demonstrated that SlyA activates fimB expression and hence type 1 fimbriation, a virulence factor in Escherichia coli. SlyA is shown to bind to two operator sites (OSA1 and OSA2), situated between 194 and 167 base pairs upstream of the fimB transcriptional start site. fimB expression is derepressed in an hns mutant and diminished by a slyA mutation in the presence of H-NS only. H-NS binds to multiple sites in the promoter region, including two sites (H-NS2 and H-NS3) that overlap OSA1 and OSA2, respectively. Mutations that disrupt either OSA1 or OSA2 eliminate or reduce the activating effect of SlyA but have different effects on the level of expression. We interpret these results as reflecting the relative competition between SlyA and H-NS binding. Moreover we show that SlyA is capable of displacing H-NS from its binding sites in vitro. We suggest SlyA binding prevents H-NS binding to H-NS2 and H-NS3 and the subsequent oligomerization of H-NS necessary for full inhibition of fimB expression. In addition, we show that SlyA activates fimB expression independently of two other known regulators of fimB expression, NanR and NagC. It is demonstrated that the rarely used UUG initiation codon limits slyA expression and that low SlyA levels limit fimB expression. Furthermore, Western blot analysis shows that cells grown in rich-defined medium contain ∼1000 SlyA dimers per cell whereas those grown in minimal medium contain >20% more SlyA. This study extends our understanding of the role that SlyA plays in the host-bacterial relationship.
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