Heteroresistance at the Single-Cell Level: Adapting to Antibiotic Stress through a Population-Based Strategy and Growth-Controlled Interphenotypic Coordination

Author:

Wang Xiaorong1,Kang Yu2,Luo Chunxiong3,Zhao Tong4,Liu Lin1,Jiang Xiangdan3,Fu Rongrong2,An Shuchang1,Chen Jichao5,Jiang Ning1,Ren Lufeng2,Wang Qi6,Baillie J. Kenneth78,Gao Zhancheng1,Yu Jun2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Respiratory & Critical Care Medicine, Peking University People’s Hospital, Beijing, People’s Republic of China

2. CAS Key Laboratory of Genome Sciences and Information, Beijing Institute of Genomics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, People’s Republic of China

3. Center for Microfluidic and Nanotechnology, State Key Laboratory for Artificial Microstructures and Mesoscopic Physics, School of Physics, Peking University, Beijing, People’s Republic of China

4. Institute of Microbiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, People’s Republic of China

5. Department of Respiratory Medicine, Central Hospital of China Aerospace Corporation, Beijing, People’s Republic of China

6. Department of Respiratory Medicine, Second Hospital of Dalian Medical University, Dalian, Liaoning, People’s Republic of China

7. Division of Genetics and Genomics, The Roslin Institute, University of Edinburgh, Roslin, United Kingdom

8. Department of Critical Care Medicine, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

Abstract

ABSTRACT Heteroresistance refers to phenotypic heterogeneity of microbial clonal populations under antibiotic stress, and it has been thought to be an allocation of a subset of “resistant” cells for surviving in higher concentrations of antibiotic. The assumption fits the so-called bet-hedging strategy, where a bacterial population “hedges” its “bet” on different phenotypes to be selected by unpredicted environment stresses. To test this hypothesis, we constructed a heteroresistance model by introducing a bla CTX-M-14 gene (coding for a cephalosporin hydrolase) into a sensitive Escherichia coli strain. We confirmed heteroresistance in this clone and that a subset of the cells expressed more hydrolase and formed more colonies in the presence of ceftriaxone (exhibited stronger “resistance”). However, subsequent single-cell-level investigation by using a microfluidic device showed that a subset of cells with a distinguishable phenotype of slowed growth and intensified hydrolase expression emerged, and they were not positively selected but increased their proportion in the population with ascending antibiotic concentrations. Therefore, heteroresistance—the gradually decreased colony-forming capability in the presence of antibiotic—was a result of a decreased growth rate rather than of selection for resistant cells. Using a mock strain without the resistance gene, we further demonstrated the existence of two nested growth-centric feedback loops that control the expression of the hydrolase and maximize population growth in various antibiotic concentrations. In conclusion, phenotypic heterogeneity is a population-based strategy beneficial for bacterial survival and propagation through task allocation and interphenotypic collaboration, and the growth rate provides a critical control for the expression of stress-related genes and an essential mechanism in responding to environmental stresses. IMPORTANCE Heteroresistance is essentially phenotypic heterogeneity, where a population-based strategy is thought to be at work, being assumed to be variable cell-to-cell resistance to be selected under antibiotic stress. Exact mechanisms of heteroresistance and its roles in adaptation to antibiotic stress have yet to be fully understood at the molecular and single-cell levels. In our study, we have not been able to detect any apparent subset of “resistant” cells selected by antibiotics; on the contrary, cell populations differentiate into phenotypic subsets with variable growth statuses and hydrolase expression. The growth rate appears to be sensitive to stress intensity and plays a key role in controlling hydrolase expression at both the bulk population and single-cell levels. We have shown here, for the first time, that phenotypic heterogeneity can be beneficial to a growing bacterial population through task allocation and interphenotypic collaboration other than partitioning cells into different categories of selective advantage.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Microbiology

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