Genetic mechanisms contributing to antimicrobial resistance: gene repression in Mycobacterium, gene transfer in Salmonella, and phage sensitivity in Escherichia
Abstract
Bacteria develop resistance to antimicrobial agents through genetic mutation or
horizontal acquisition of genetic material from resistant cells. Mycobacterium,
Salmonella, and Escherichia are all capable of causing disease, and each demonstrates
increasing resistance to conventional antibiotic treatment. Understanding the genetic
mechanisms that regulate antibiotic resistance are critical in developing new
antimicrobials and improving current treatment regimens. Alternative therapies to
antibiotics should also be considered in the fight against multidrug resistant pathogens.
Thus, I carried out molecular studies to investigate the regulation of efflux pump
expression in Mycobacterium intracellulare, regulation mechanisms of natural
competence in Salmonella Typhimurium, and phage therapy of Enterohemorrhagic
Escherichia coli serogroup O157:H7.
A recent study showed specific mutations in the uncharacterized locus mmpT5
increased resistance to anti-TB drug bedaquiline in M. intracellulare lung infections.
Based on previous work, MmpT5 is a TetR transcription factor hypothesized to repress
expression of the downstream Resistance Nodulation Division (RND) efflux pump
mmpSL. To test this, we assembled multigene constructs on a plasmid with the modular
cloning (MoClo) toolkit, which allowed us to control the expression of mmpT5 with the
lacZ promoter and monitor mmpSL promoter activity with a fusion to lux. Consistent with
the hypothesis, induction of mmpT5 reduced expression of mmpSL. The nonsynonymous
mutations in mmpT5 first identified in clinical isolates resulted in upregulation of mmpSL,
suggesting a mechanism for bedaquiline resistance.
The periplasmic protein ComA is essential for active uptake of DNA from the
environment. In Salmonella Typhimurium, comA is transcriptionally silent, even when
the predicted activator Sxy is overexpressed. Identification of a mRNA stem-loop in the
comA promoter region provides a possible gene repression mechanism. We used the
MoClo toolkit to assemble comA promoter-luciferase fusions with or without the
predicted mRNA secondary structure, and we used site-directed mutagenesis (SDM) to
destabilize the predicted mRNA stem-loop. Luciferase reporter assays showed stem-loop
removal or destabilization via SDM increased comA expression under the control of the
lacZ promoter. SDM destabilization of the mRNA stem-loop did not increase
luminescence of the native comA, but induction of sxy resulted in a 197-fold increase in
luminescence compared to the wild type when the predicted stem-loop was destabilized,
presenting a clear explanation for the cryptic nature of comA expression in Salmonella.
Phage therapy presents an attractive alternative to conventional antibiotic
treatment, prompting a study of the sensitivity of Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli
(EHEC) serogroup O157:H7 to phage killing using a tetrazolium reduction assay.
Measuring tetrazolium reduction at A485 successfully showed which EHEC strains were
sensitive to the T4-like typing phage 13 (TP13). Addition of T7-like phage TP9 to TP13
increased the efficacy of phage treatment. TP13 resistance was observed in EHEC strains
with the stx2a lysogen. RT-qPCR and plasmid complementation experiments showed that
the hypothetical gene H2 was not responsible for TP13 resistance. Subsequent review of
recent literature revealed that the downstream tyrosine kinase stk is likely responsible for
TP13 resistance through abortive infection. Altogether, this thesis studies three bacterial
systems to better understand the genetic bases of antimicrobial resistance, including gene
transfer mechanisms, and to find the genetic bases of phage sensitivity.