Profiling the effect of nafcillin on HA-MRSA D712 using bacteriological and physiological media.
Akanksha RajputSaugat PoudelHannah TsunemotoMichael MeehanRichard SzubinConnor A OlsonAnne LamsaYara SeifNicholas DillonAlison VrbanacJoseph SugieSamira DaheshJonathan M MonkPieter C DorresteinRob KnightVictor NizetBernhard O PalssonAdam M FeistJoe PoglianoPublished in: Scientific data (2019)
Staphylococcus aureus strains have been continuously evolving resistance to numerous classes of antibiotics including methicillin, vancomycin, daptomycin and linezolid, compounding the enormous healthcare and economic burden of the pathogen. Cation-adjusted Mueller-Hinton broth (CA-MHB) is the standard bacteriological media for measuring antibiotic susceptibility in the clinical lab, but the use of media that more closely mimic the physiological state of the patient, e.g. mammalian tissue culture media, can in certain circumstances reveal antibiotic activities that may be more predictive of effectiveness in vivo. In the current study, we use both types of media to explore antibiotic resistance phenomena in hospital-acquired USA100 lineage methicillin-resistant, vancomycin-intermediate Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA/VISA) strain D712 via multidimensional high throughput analysis of growth rates, bacterial cytological profiling, RNA sequencing, and exo-metabolomics (HPLC and LC-MS). Here, we share data generated from these assays to shed light on the antibiotic resistance behavior of MRSA/VISA D712 in both bacteriological and physiological media.
Keyphrases
- methicillin resistant staphylococcus aureus
- staphylococcus aureus
- single cell
- healthcare
- high throughput
- biofilm formation
- mass spectrometry
- randomized controlled trial
- systematic review
- ms ms
- emergency department
- ionic liquid
- case report
- dna methylation
- deep learning
- health insurance
- artificial intelligence
- candida albicans