Ironing out Persisters? Revisiting the Iron Chelation Strategy to Target Planktonic Bacterial Persisters Harboured in Carbapenem-Resistant Escherichia coli

Author:

Yeo Jia Hao12ORCID,Begam Nasren1,Leow Wan Ting1,Goh Jia Xuan1,Zhong Yang13,Cai Yiying1,Kwa Andrea Lay-Hoon145

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacy, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore 169608, Singapore

2. SingHealth-Duke-NUS Academic Clinical Programme (Pathology), Singapore 169857, Singapore

3. Department of Clinical Translational Research, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore 169856, Singapore

4. SingHealth-Duke-NUS Academic Clinical Programme (Medicine), Singapore 169857, Singapore

5. Emerging Infectious Diseases, Duke-National University of Singapore Medical School, Singapore 169857, Singapore

Abstract

Antibiotic resistance is a global health crisis. Notably, carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales (CRE) pose a significant clinical challenge due to the limited effective treatment options. This problem is exacerbated by persisters that develop upon antibiotic exposure. Bacteria persisters can tolerate high antibiotic doses and can cause recalcitrant infections, potentially developing further antibiotic resistance. Iron is a critical micronutrient for survival. We aimed to evaluate the utility of iron chelators, alone and in combination with antibiotics, in managing persisters. We hypothesized that iron chelators eradicate CRE persisters in vitro, when administered in combination with antibiotics. Our screening revealed three clinical isolates with bacteria persisters that resuscitated upon antibiotic removal. These isolates were treated with both meropenem and an iron chelator (deferoxamine mesylate, deferiprone or dexrazoxane) over 24 h. Against our hypothesis, bacteria persisters survived and resuscitated upon withdrawing both the antibiotic and iron chelator. Pursuing our aim, we next hypothesized that iron chelation is feasible as a post-antibiotic treatment in managing and suppressing persisters’ resuscitation. We exposed bacteria persisters to an iron chelator without antibiotics. Flow cytometric assessments revealed that iron chelators are inconsistent in suppressing persister resuscitation. Collectively, these results suggest that the iron chelation strategy may not be useful as an antibiotic adjunct to target planktonic bacteria persisters.

Funder

National Medical Research Council

NMRC Clinician Scientist Awards

Singapore General Hospital (SGH) New Investigator Grant

SingHealth-Duke-NUS Academic Medicine Grant

Infectious Disease Research Institute-Strategic Collaborative Fund

National Centre for Infectious Diseases

Publisher

MDPI AG

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