Secondary messenger signalling influences Pseudomonas aeruginosa adaptation to sinus and lung environments

Author:

Ruhluel Dilem12,Fisher Lewis3,Barton Thomas E4,Leighton Hollie12,Kumar Sumit4,Amores Morillo Paula12,O’Brien Siobhan56,Fothergill Joanne L12,Neill Daniel R4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Clinical Infection , Microbiology and Immunology, , Ronald Ross Building, 8 West Derby Street, Liverpool , United Kingdom

2. University of Liverpool , Microbiology and Immunology, , Ronald Ross Building, 8 West Derby Street, Liverpool , United Kingdom

3. Wellcome Sanger Institute, Wellcome Genome Campus , Cambridge , United Kingdom

4. Division of Molecular Microbiology, University of Dundee , Dow Street, Dundee , United Kingdom

5. Department of Microbiology , Moyne Institute of Preventive Medicine, , Dublin, 2 , Ireland

6. Trinity College , Moyne Institute of Preventive Medicine, , Dublin, 2 , Ireland

Abstract

Abstract Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a cause of chronic respiratory tract infections in people with cystic fibrosis (CF), non-CF bronchiectasis, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Prolonged infection allows the accumulation of mutations and horizontal gene transfer, increasing the likelihood of adaptive phenotypic traits. Adaptation is proposed to arise first in bacterial populations colonizing upper airway environments. Here, we model this process using an experimental evolution approach. Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1, which is not airway adapted, was serially passaged, separately, in media chemically reflective of upper or lower airway environments. To explore whether the CF environment selects for unique traits, we separately passaged PAO1 in airway-mimicking media with or without CF-specific factors. Our findings demonstrated that all airway environments—sinus and lungs, under CF and non-CF conditions—selected for loss of twitching motility, increased resistance to multiple antibiotic classes, and a hyper-biofilm phenotype. These traits conferred increased airway colonization potential in an in vivo model. CF-like conditions exerted stronger selective pressures, leading to emergence of more pronounced phenotypes. Loss of twitching was associated with mutations in type IV pili genes. Type IV pili mediate surface attachment, twitching, and induction of cAMP signalling. We additionally identified multiple evolutionary routes to increased biofilm formation involving regulation of cyclic-di-GMP signalling. These included the loss of function mutations in bifA and dipA phosphodiesterase genes and activating mutations in the siaA phosphatase. These data highlight that airway environments select for traits associated with sessile lifestyles and suggest upper airway niches support emergence of phenotypes that promote establishment of lung infection.

Funder

NC3Rs

Strategic Research Centre

UK Cystic Fibrosis Trust

CF Foundation

Wellcome and Royal Society Sir Henry Dale

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference74 articles.

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