Antibiotic-induced ROS-mediated Fur allosterism contributes to Helicobacter pylori resistance by inhibiting arsR activation of mutS and mutY .
Junyuan XueWen LiYican ZhaoLiyuan WangPeiyuan ChengLu ZhangYantong ZhengWenxin ZhangYakun BiZhenghong ChenTing JiangYundong SunPublished in: Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy (2024)
The increasing antibiotic resistance of Helicobacter pylori primarily driven by genetic mutations poses a significant clinical challenge. Although previous research has suggested that antibiotics could induce genetic mutations in H. pylori , the molecular mechanisms regulating the antibiotic induction remain unclear. In this study, we applied various techniques (e.g., fluorescence microscopy, flow cytometry, and multifunctional microplate reader) to discover that three different types of antibiotics could induce the intracellular generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in H. pylori . It is well known that ROS, a critical factor contributing to bacterial drug resistance, not only induces damage to bacterial genomic DNA but also inhibits the expression of genes associated with DNA damage repair, thereby increasing the mutation rate of bacterial genes and leading to drug resistance. However, further research is needed to explore the molecular mechanisms underlying the ROS inhibition of the expression of DNA damage repair-related genes in H. pylori . In this work, we validated that ROS could trigger an allosteric change in the iron uptake regulatory protein Fur, causing its transition from apo-Fur to holo-Fur, repressing the expression of the regulatory protein ArsR, ultimately causing the down-regulation of key DNA damage repair genes (e.g., mutS and mutY ); this cascade increased the genomic DNA mutation rate in H. pylori . This study unveils a novel mechanism of antibiotic-induced resistance in H. pylori , providing crucial insights for the prevention and control of antibiotic resistance in H. pylori .
Keyphrases
- dna damage
- helicobacter pylori
- reactive oxygen species
- oxidative stress
- single molecule
- poor prognosis
- dna repair
- helicobacter pylori infection
- genome wide
- binding protein
- diabetic rats
- flow cytometry
- copy number
- cell death
- circulating tumor
- high glucose
- transcription factor
- cell free
- small molecule
- signaling pathway
- drug induced
- drug delivery
- cancer therapy
- endothelial cells
- protein protein
- optical coherence tomography
- single cell