Antibiotics Limit Adaptation of Drug-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus to Hypoxia.
Rebecca C HullRosanna C T WrightJon R SayersJoshua A F SuttonJulia RzaskaSimon J FosterMichael A BrockhurstAlison M CondliffePublished in: Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy (2022)
Bacterial pathogens are confronted with a range of challenges at the site of infection, including exposure to antibiotic treatment and harsh physiological conditions, that can alter the fitness benefits and costs of acquiring antibiotic resistance. Here, we develop an experimental system to recapitulate resistance gene acquisition by Staphylococcus aureus and test how the subsequent evolution of the resistant bacterium is modulated by antibiotic treatment and oxygen levels, both of which are known to vary extensively at sites of infection. We show that acquiring tetracycline resistance was costly, reducing competitive growth against the isogenic strain without the resistance gene in the absence of the antibiotic, for S. aureus under hypoxic but not normoxic conditions. Treatment with tetracycline or doxycycline drove the emergence of enhanced resistance through mutations in an RluD-like protein-encoding gene and duplications of tetL , encoding the acquired tetracycline-specific efflux pump. In contrast, evolutionary adaptation by S. aureus to hypoxic conditions, which evolved in the absence of antibiotics through mutations affecting gyrB , was impeded by antibiotic treatment. Together, these data suggest that the horizontal acquisition of a new resistance mechanism is merely a starting point for the emergence of high-level resistance under antibiotic selection but that antibiotic treatment constrains pathogen adaptation to other important environmental selective forces such as hypoxia, which in turn could limit the survival of these highly resistant but poorly adapted genotypes after antibiotic treatment is ended.