Diffusion of antibiotics through the PilQ secretin in Neisseria gonorrhoeae occurs through the immature, sodium dodecyl sulfate-labile form.
Sobhan NandiShauna SwansonJoshua TombergRobert A NicholasPublished in: Journal of bacteriology (2015)
The capacity of antibiotics to reach their target is crucial for their activity. In Neisseria gonorrhoeae, the PilQ secretin of type IV pili plays an important role in antibiotic influx when diffusion of antibiotics through porins is limited (e.g., in most resistant strains). On Western blots, PilQ exists both as a mature higher-order multimer and an immature, SDS-labile monomer. In this study, we examined spontaneously arising mutations in PilQ and in the genes upstream of PilQ in the pilMNOPQ operon that increase resistance to penicillin. We provide evidence that PilQ monomers associate by mass action to form immature multimers and that these complexes likely mediate the diffusion of antibiotics across the outer membrane.