Affiliation:
1. Division of Infectious Diseases, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02114
2. Channing Laboratory, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, 181 Longwood Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts 02115
Abstract
ABSTRACT
While remaining a major problem in hospitals,
Staphylococcus aureus
is now spreading in communities. Strain MW2 (USA400 lineage) and other community methicillin-resistant
S. aureus
strains most commonly cause skin infections with abscess formation. Multidrug resistance (MDR) efflux pumps contribute to antimicrobial resistance but may also contribute to bacterial survival by removal of environmental toxins. In
S. aureus
, NorA, NorB, NorC, and Tet38 are chromosomally encoded efflux pumps whose overexpression can confer MDR to quinolones and other compounds (Nor pumps) or tetracyclines alone (Tet38), but the natural substrates of these pumps are not known. To determine the role of these efflux pumps in a natural environment in the absence of antibiotics, we used strain MW2 in a mouse subcutaneous abscess model and compared pump gene expression as determined by reverse transcription-PCR in the abscesses and in vitro.
norB
and
tet38
were selectively upregulated in vivo more than 171- and 24-fold, respectively, whereas
norA
and
norC
were downregulated. These changes were associated with an increase in expression of
mgrA
, which encodes a transcriptional regulator known to affect pump gene expression. In competition experiments using equal inocula of a
norB
or
tet38
mutant and parent strain MW2, each mutant exhibited growth defects of about two- to threefold in vivo. In complementation experiments, a single-copy insertion of
norB
(but not a single-copy insertion of
tet38
) in the
attB
site within
geh
restored the growth fitness of the
norB
mutant in vivo. Our findings indicate that some MDR pumps, like NorB, can facilitate bacterial survival when they are overexpressed in a staphylococcal abscess and may contribute to the relative resistance of abscesses to antimicrobial therapy, thus linking bacterial fitness and resistance in vivo.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
134 articles.
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