Antibiotic-dependent correlation between drug-induced killing and loss of luminescence in Streptococcus gordonii expressing luciferase.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_33A8CA65928B
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Antibiotic-dependent correlation between drug-induced killing and loss of luminescence in Streptococcus gordonii expressing luciferase.
Journal
Microbial Drug Resistance
Author(s)
Loeliger B., Caldelari I., Bizzini A., Stutzmann Meier P., Majcherczyk P.A., Moreillon P.
ISSN
1076-6294 (Print)
ISSN-L
1076-6294
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2003
Volume
9
Number
2
Pages
123-131
Language
english
Abstract
Measuring antibiotic-induced killing relies on time-consuming biological tests. The firefly luciferase gene (luc) was successfully used as a reporter gene to assess antibiotic efficacy rapidly in slow-growing Mycobacterium tuberculosis. We tested whether luc expression could also provide a rapid evaluation of bactericidal drugs in Streptococcus gordonii. The suicide vectors pFW5luc and a modified version of pJDC9 carrying a promoterless luc gene were used to construct transcriptional-fusion mutants. One mutant susceptible to penicillin-induced killing (LMI2) and three penicillin-tolerant derivatives (LMI103, LMI104, and LMI105) producing luciferase under independent streptococcal promoters were tested. The correlation between antibiotic-induced killing and luminescence was determined with mechanistically unrelated drugs. Chloramphenicol (20 times the MIC) inhibited bacterial growth. In parallel, luciferase stopped increasing and remained stable, as determined by luminescence and Western blots. Ciprofloxacin (200 times the MIC) rapidly killed 1.5 log10 CFU/ml in 2-4 hr. Luminescence decreased simultaneously by 10-fold. In contrast, penicillin (200 times the MIC) gave discordant results. Although killing was slow (< or = 0.5 log10 CFU/ml in 2 hr), luminescence dropped abruptly by 50-100-times in the same time. Inactivating penicillin with penicillinase restored luminescence, irrespective of viable counts. This was not due to altered luciferase expression or stability, suggesting some kind of post-translational modification. Luciferase shares homology with aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase and acyl-CoA ligase, which might be regulated by macromolecule synthesis and hence affected in penicillin-inhibited cells. Because of resemblance, luciferase might be down-regulated simultaneously. Luminescence cannot be universally used to predict antibiotic-induced killing. Thus, introducing reporter enzymes sharing mechanistic similarities with normal metabolic reactions might reveal other effects than those expected.
Keywords
Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology, Anti-Infective Agents/pharmacology, Blotting, Western, Chloramphenicol/pharmacology, Ciprofloxacin/pharmacology, Colony Count, Microbial, Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic/drug effects, Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic/genetics, Genes, Bacterial/genetics, Genes, Reporter/genetics, Luciferases/biosynthesis, Luminescent Measurements, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Penicillin Resistance/genetics, Penicillins/pharmacology, Streptococcus/drug effects, Streptococcus/enzymology, Transcription, Genetic
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
24/01/2008 14:54
Last modification date
20/08/2019 14:19
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