Staphylococcus aureus AbcA transporter enhances persister formation under β-lactam exposure

Author:

Truong-Bolduc Q. C.1ORCID,Wang Y.1,Ferrer-Espada R.2,Reedy J. L.1,Martens A. T.2,Goulev Y.2,Paulsson J.2,Vyas J. M.1,Hooper D. C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Infectious Diseases Division and Medical Services, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

2. Department of Systems Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT We evaluated the role of Staphylococcus aureus AbcA transporter in bacterial persistence and survival following exposure to the bactericidal agents nafcillin and oxacillin at both the population and single-cell levels. We show that AbcA overexpression resulted in resistance to nafcillin but not oxacillin. Using distinct fluorescent reporters of cell viability and AbcA expression, we found that over 6–14 hours of persistence formation, the proportion of AbcA reporter-expressing cells assessed by confocal microscopy increased sixfold as cell viability reporters decreased. Similarly, single-cell analysis in a high-throughput microfluidic system found a strong correspondence between antibiotic exposure and AbcA reporter expression. Persister cells grown in the absence of antibiotics showed neither an increase in nafcillin MIC nor in abcA transcript levels, indicating that survival was not associated with stable mutational resistance or abcA overexpression. Furthermore, persister cell levels on exposure to 1×MIC and 25×MIC of nafcillin decreased in an abcA knockout mutant. Survivors of nafcillin and oxacillin treatment overexpressed transporter AbcA, contributing to an enrichment of the number of persisters during treatment with pump-substrate nafcillin but not with pump-non-substrate oxacillin, indicating that efflux pump expression can contribute selectively to the survival of a persister population.

Funder

HHS | National Institutes of Health

HHS | NIH | NIAID | Division of Intramural Research

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

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