Infections caused by Staphylococcus aureus are a leading cause of mortality. Treating infections caused by S. aureus is difficult due to resistance against most traditional antibiotics, including β-lactams. We previously reported the presence of mutations in gdpP among S. aureus strains that were obtained by serial passaging in β-lactam drugs. Similar mutations have recently been reported in natural S. aureus isolates that are either non-susceptible or resistant to β-lactam antibiotics. gdpP codes for a phosphodiesterase that cleaves cyclic-di-AMP (CDA), a newly discovered second messenger. In this study, we sought to identify the role of gdpP in β-lactam resistance in S. aureus . Our results showed that gdpP associated mutations caused loss of phosphodiesterase function, leading to increased CDA accumulation in the bacterial cytosol. Deletion of gdpP led to an enhanced ability of the bacteria to withstand a β-lactam challenge (two to three log increase in bacterial colony forming units) by promoting tolerance without enhancing MICs of β-lactam antibiotics. Our results demonstrated that increased drug tolerance due to loss of GdpP function can provide a selective advantage in acquisition of high-level β-lactam resistance. Loss of GdpP function thus increases tolerance to β-lactams that can lead to its therapy failure and can permit β-lactam resistance to occur more readily.
Background PBP4, a low-molecular-weight PBP in Staphylococcus aureus, is not considered to be a classical mediator of β-lactam resistance. Previous studies carried out by our group with laboratory strains of S. aureus demonstrated the ability of PBP4 to produce β-lactam resistance through mutations associated with the pbp4 promoter and/or gene. Recent studies of β-lactam-resistant clinical isolates of S. aureus have reported similar mutations associated with pbp4. Objectives To determine if pbp4-associated mutations reported among clinical strains of S. aureus mediate β-lactam resistance. Methods The pbp4 promoters and genes bearing mutations from clinical isolates were cloned into a heterologous host. Reporter, growth and Bocillin assays were performed to assess their role in β-lactam resistance. X-ray crystallography was used to obtain acyl-enzyme intermediate structures of the WT and mutant PBP4 with nafcillin and cefoxitin. Results Of the five strains that contained pbp4 promoter mutations, three strains exhibited enhanced expression of PBP4. The R200L mutation in pbp4 resulted in increased survival in the presence of the β-lactams nafcillin and cefoxitin. Further, introduction of either a promoter or a gene mutation into the genome of a WT host increased the ability of the strains to resist the action of β-lactams. The four high-resolution X-ray structures presented demonstrate the binding pose of the β-lactams tested and provide hints for further drug development. Conclusions Mutations associated with the pbp4 promoter and pbp4 gene altered protein activity and mediated β-lactam resistance among the clinically isolated strains that were studied.
Our study demonstrates the ability of PBP4 to be an important mediator of β-lactam resistance in not only methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA) background strains as previously demonstrated but also in MRSA strains. When present together, PBP2a and PBP4 overexpression can produce increased levels of β-lactam resistance, causing complications in treatment.
Broad-spectrum β-lactam antibiotic resistance in Staphylococcus aureus is a global healthcare burden1,2. In clinical strains, resistance is largely controlled by BlaR13, a receptor that senses β-lactams through the acylation of its sensor domain, inducing transmembrane signalling and activation of the cytoplasmic-facing metalloprotease domain4. The metalloprotease domain has a role in BlaI derepression, inducing blaZ (β-lactamase PC1) and mecA (β-lactam-resistant cell-wall transpeptidase PBP2a) expression3–7. Here, overcoming hurdles in isolation, we show that BlaR1 cleaves BlaI directly, as necessary for inactivation, with no requirement for additional components as suggested previously8. Cryo-electron microscopy structures of BlaR1—the wild type and an autocleavage-deficient F284A mutant, with or without β-lactam—reveal a domain-swapped dimer that we suggest is critical to the stabilization of the signalling loops within. BlaR1 undergoes spontaneous autocleavage in cis between Ser283 and Phe284 and we describe the catalytic mechanism and specificity underlying the self and BlaI cleavage. The structures suggest that allosteric signalling emanates from β-lactam-induced exclusion of the prominent extracellular loop bound competitively in the sensor-domain active site, driving subsequent dynamic motions, including a shift in the sensor towards the membrane and accompanying changes in the zinc metalloprotease domain. We propose that this enhances the expulsion of autocleaved products from the active site, shifting the equilibrium to a state that is permissive of efficient BlaI cleavage. Collectively, this study provides a structure of a two-component signalling receptor that mediates action—in this case, antibiotic resistance—through the direct cleavage of a repressor.
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