Failures in Clinical Treatment of Staphylococcus aureus Infection with Daptomycin Are Associated with Alterations in Surface Charge, Membrane Phospholipid Asymmetry, and Drug Binding

Author:

Jones Tiffanny1,Yeaman Michael R.123,Sakoulas George4,Yang Soo-Jin1,Proctor Richard A.5,Sahl Hans-Georg6,Schrenzel Jacques7,Xiong Yan Q.123,Bayer Arnold S.123

Affiliation:

1. Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute, Torrance, California

2. Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Torrance, California

3. Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, California

4. Department of Medicine/Infectious Diseases, New York Medical College, Valhalla, New York

5. Departments of Microbiology, Immunology and Medicine, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin

6. Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, University of Bonn, Bonn, Germany

7. Department of Internal Medicine, University Hospitals, Geneva, Switzerland

Abstract

ABSTRACT Increasingly frequent reports have described the in vivo loss of daptomycin susceptibility in association with clinical treatment failures. The mechanism(s) of daptomycin resistance is not well understood. We studied an isogenic set of Staphylococcus aureus isolates from the bloodstream of a daptomycin-treated patient with recalcitrant endocarditis in which serial strains exhibited decreasing susceptibility to daptomycin. Since daptomycin is a membrane-targeting lipopeptide, we compared a number of membrane parameters in the initial blood isolate (parental) with those in subsequent daptomycin-resistant strains obtained during treatment. In comparison to the parental strain, resistant isolates demonstrated (i) enhanced membrane fluidity, (ii) increased translocation of the positively charged phospholipid lysyl-phosphotidylglycerol to the outer membrane leaflet, (iii) increased net positive surface charge ( P < 0.05 versus the parental strain), (iv) reduced susceptibility to daptomycin-induced depolarization, permeabilization, and autolysis ( P < 0.05 versus the parental strain), (v) significantly lower surface binding of daptomycin ( P < 0.05 versus the parental strain), and (vi) increased cross-resistance to the cationic antimicrobial host defense peptides human neutrophil peptide 1 (hNP-1) and thrombin-induced platelet microbicidal protein 1 (tPMP-1). These data link distinct changes in membrane structure and function with in vivo development of daptomycin resistance in S. aureus . Moreover, the cross-resistance to hNP-1 and tPMP-1 may also impact the capacity of these daptomycin-resistant organisms to be cleared from sites of infection, particularly endovascular foci.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology

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