Stress-Adaptive Responses Associated with High-Level Carbapenem Resistance in KPC-Producing Klebsiella pneumoniae.
Sheila AdamsAdam GayosoLee W RileyPublished in: Journal of pathogens (2018)
Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) organisms have emerged to become a major global public health threat among antimicrobial resistant bacterial human pathogens. Little is known about how CREs emerge. One characteristic phenotype of CREs is heteroresistance, which is clinically associated with treatment failure in patients given a carbapenem. Through in vitro whole-transcriptome analysis we tracked gene expression over time in two different strains (BR7, BR21) of heteroresistant KPC-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae, first exposed to a bactericidal concentration of imipenem followed by growth in drug-free medium. In both strains, the immediate response was dominated by a shift in expression of genes involved in glycolysis toward those involved in catabolic pathways. This response was followed by global dampening of transcriptional changes involving protein translation, folding and transport, and decreased expression of genes encoding critical junctures of lipopolysaccharide biosynthesis. The emerged high-level carbapenem-resistant BR21 subpopulation had a prophage (IS1) disrupting ompK36 associated with irreversible OmpK36 porin loss. On the other hand, OmpK36 loss in BR7 was reversible. The acquisition of high-level carbapenem resistance by the two heteroresistant strains was associated with distinct and shared stepwise transcriptional programs. Carbapenem heteroresistance may emerge from the most adaptive subpopulation among a population of cells undergoing a complex set of stress-adaptive responses.
Keyphrases
- klebsiella pneumoniae
- escherichia coli
- gene expression
- multidrug resistant
- public health
- gram negative
- poor prognosis
- end stage renal disease
- binding protein
- dna methylation
- ejection fraction
- endothelial cells
- transcription factor
- drug resistant
- staphylococcus aureus
- chronic kidney disease
- acinetobacter baumannii
- genome wide
- inflammatory response
- long non coding rna
- emergency department
- cell cycle arrest
- single molecule
- cell death
- lps induced
- molecular dynamics simulations
- cell proliferation
- stress induced
- cystic fibrosis
- protein protein
- heat stress
- adverse drug
- global health