Affiliation:
1. Department of Bacteriology, Faculty of Medicine, Juntendo University, Tokyo, Japan
2. Department of Infection Control Science, Graduate School of Medicine, Juntendo University, Tokyo, Japan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Various mutations in the
rpoB
gene, which encodes the RNA polymerase β subunit, are associated with increased vancomycin (VAN) resistance in vancomycin-intermediate
Staphylococcus aureus
(VISA) and heterogeneously VISA (hVISA) strains. We reported that
rpoB
mutations are also linked to the expression of the recently found “slow VISA” (sVISA) phenotype (M. Saito, Y. Katayama, T. Hishinuma, A. Iwamoto, Y. Aiba, K Kuwahara-Arai, L. Cui, M. Matsuo, N. Aritaka, and K. Hiramatsu, Antimicrob Agents Chemother 58:5024–5035, 2014,
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AAC.02470-13
). Because RpoC and RpoB are components of RNA polymerase, we examined the effect of the
rpoC
(P440L) mutation on the expression of the sVISA phenotype in the Mu3
fdh2
*V6-5 strain (V6-5), which was derived from a previously reported hVISA strain with the VISA phenotype. V6-5 had an extremely prolonged doubling time (DT) (72 min) and high vancomycin MIC (16 mg/liter). However, the phenotype of V6-5 was unstable, and the strain frequently reverted to hVISA with concomitant loss of low growth rate, cell wall thickness, and reduced autolysis. Whole-genome sequencing of phenotypic revertant strain V6-5-L1 and comparison with V6-5 revealed a second mutation, F562L, in
rpoC
. Introduction of the wild-type (WT)
rpoC
gene using a multicopy plasmid resolved the sVISA phenotype of V6-5, indicating that the
rpoC
(P440L) mutant expressed the sVISA phenotype in hVISA. To investigate the mechanisms of resistance in the sVISA strain, we independently isolated an additional 10 revertants to hVISA and VISA. In subsequent whole-genome analysis, we identified compensatory mutations in the genes of three distinct functional categories: the
rpoC
gene itself as regulatory mutations, peptidoglycan biosynthesis genes, and
relQ
, which is involved in the stringent response. It appears that the
rpoC
(P440L) mutation causes the sVISA phenotype by augmenting cell wall peptidoglycan synthesis and through the control of the stringent response.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology