New Resistance Mutations Linked to Decreased Susceptibility to Solithromycin in Streptococcus pneumoniae Revealed by Chemogenomic Screens.
Hélène GingrasFlora Peillard-FiorenteChantal GodinKevin PatronPhilippe LeprohonMarc OuellettePublished in: Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy (2023)
Two strains of Streptococcus pneumoniae, one expressing the methyltransferase Erm(B) and the other negative for erm (B), were selected for solithromycin resistance in vitro either with direct drug selection or with chemical mutagenesis followed by drug selection. We obtained a series of mutants that we characterized by next-generation sequencing. We found mutations in various ribosomal proteins (L3, L4, L22, L32, and S4) and in the 23S rRNA. We also found mutations in subunits of the phosphate transporter, in the DEAD box helicase CshB, and in the erm (B)L leader peptide. All mutations were shown to decrease solithromycin susceptibility when transformed into sensitive isolates. Some of the genes derived from our in vitro screens were found to be mutated also in clinical isolates with decreased susceptibility to solithromycin. While many mutations were in coding sequences, some were found in regulatory regions. These included novel phenotypic mutations in the intergenic regions of the macrolide resistance locus mef (E)/ mel and in the vicinity of the ribosome binding site of erm (B). Our screens highlighted that macrolide-resistant S. pneumoniae can easily acquire resistance to solithromycin, and they revealed many new phenotypic mutations.