Abstract
AbstractColistin remains one of the few antibiotics effective against
multi-drug resistant (MDR) hospital pathogens, such as Klebsiella pneumoniae. Yet resistance to this last-line drug is
rapidly increasing. Characterized mechanisms of colR in
K. pneumoniae are largely due to chromosomal mutations in two-component
regulators, although a plasmid-mediated colR mechanism
has recently been uncovered. However, the effects of intrinsic colistin resistance
are yet to be characterized on a whole-genome level. Here, we used a genomics-based
approach to understand the mechanisms of adaptive colR
acquisition in K. pneumoniae. In controlled directed-evolution experiments we observed
two distinct paths to colistin resistance acquisition. Whole genome sequencing
identified mutations in two colistin resistance genes: in the known
colR regulator phoQ
which became fixed in the population and resulted in a single amino acid change, and
unstable minority variants in the recently described two-component sensor crrB. Through RNAseq and microscopy, we reveal the broad
range of effects that colistin exposure has on the cell. This study is the first to
use genomics to identify a population of minority variants with mutations in a
colR gene in K.
pneumoniae.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
21 articles.
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