Plasticity and Stereotypic Rewiring of the Transcriptome Upon Bacterial Evolution of Antibiotic Resistance

Author:

Grézal Gábor12,Spohn Réka2,Méhi Orsolya23,Dunai Anett2,Lázár Viktória24,Bálint Balázs25,Nagy István56ORCID,Pál Csaba27,Papp Balázs128ORCID

Affiliation:

1. HCEMM-BRC Metabolic Systems Biology Lab , Szeged , Hungary

2. Synthetic and Systems Biology Unit, Institute of Biochemistry, Biological Research Centre, Eötvös Loránd Research Network , Szeged , Hungary

3. HCEMM-BRC Translational Microbiology Research Lab , Szeged , Hungary

4. HCEMM-BRC Pharmacodynamic Drug Interaction Research Group , Szeged , Hungary

5. SeqOmics Biotechnology Ltd. , Mórahalom , Hungary

6. Sequencing Platform, Institute of Biochemistry, Biological Research Centre, Eötvös Loránd Research Network , Szeged , Hungary

7. National Laboratory of Biotechnology, Biological Research Centre, Eötvös Loránd Research Network , Szeged , Hungary

8. National Laboratory for Health Security, Biological Research Centre, Eötvös Loránd Research Network , Szeged , Hungary

Abstract

Abstract Bacterial evolution of antibiotic resistance frequently has deleterious side effects on microbial growth, virulence, and susceptibility to other antimicrobial agents. However, it is unclear how these trade-offs could be utilized for manipulating antibiotic resistance in the clinic, not least because the underlying molecular mechanisms are poorly understood. Using laboratory evolution, we demonstrate that clinically relevant resistance mutations in Escherichia coli constitutively rewire a large fraction of the transcriptome in a repeatable and stereotypic manner. Strikingly, lineages adapted to functionally distinct antibiotics and having no resistance mutations in common show a wide range of parallel gene expression changes that alter oxidative stress response, iron homeostasis, and the composition of the bacterial outer membrane and cell surface. These common physiological alterations are associated with changes in cell morphology and enhanced sensitivity to antimicrobial peptides. Finally, the constitutive transcriptomic changes induced by resistance mutations are largely distinct from those induced by antibiotic stresses in the wild type. This indicates a limited role for genetic assimilation of the induced antibiotic stress response during resistance evolution. Our work suggests that diverse resistance mutations converge on similar global transcriptomic states that shape genetic susceptibility to antimicrobial compounds.

Funder

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

Wellcome Trust

European Research Council

National Laboratory of Biotechnology

NKFIH

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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