Extreme Antibiotic Persistence via Heterogeneity-Generating Mutations Targeting Translation

Bacterial persistence is a fascinating phenomenon in which a small subpopulation of bacteria becomes phenotypically tolerant to lethal antibiotic exposure. There is growing evidence that populations of bacteria in chronic clinical infections develop a hyperpersistent phenotype, enabling a substantia...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Anupama Khare, Saeed Tavazoie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Microbiology 2020-01-01
Series:mSystems
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00847-19
id doaj-0527ad75fa8947fb96d3d628b4123334
record_format Article
spelling doaj-0527ad75fa8947fb96d3d628b41233342020-11-25T03:29:29ZengAmerican Society for MicrobiologymSystems2379-50772020-01-0151e00847-1910.1128/mSystems.00847-19Extreme Antibiotic Persistence via Heterogeneity-Generating Mutations Targeting TranslationAnupama KhareSaeed TavazoieBacterial persistence is a fascinating phenomenon in which a small subpopulation of bacteria becomes phenotypically tolerant to lethal antibiotic exposure. There is growing evidence that populations of bacteria in chronic clinical infections develop a hyperpersistent phenotype, enabling a substantially larger subpopulation to survive repeated antibiotic treatment. The mechanisms of persistence and modes of increasing persistence rates remain largely unknown. Here, we utilized experimental evolution to select for Escherichia coli mutants that have more than a thousandfold increase in persistence rates. We discovered that a variety of individual mutations to translation-related processes are causally involved. Furthermore, we found that these mutations lead to population heterogeneity in the expression of specific genes. We show that this can be used to isolate populations in which the majority of bacteria are persisters, thereby enabling systems-level characterization of this fascinating and clinically significant microbial phenomenon.Antibiotic persistence, the noninherited tolerance of a subpopulation of bacteria to high levels of antibiotics, is a bet-hedging phenomenon with broad clinical implications. Indeed, the isolation of bacteria with substantially increased persistence rates from chronic infections suggests that evolution of hyperpersistence is a significant factor in clinical therapy resistance. However, the pathways that lead to hyperpersistence and the underlying cellular states have yet to be systematically studied. Here, we show that laboratory evolution can lead to increase in persistence rates by orders of magnitude for multiple independently evolved populations of Escherichia coli and that the driving mutations are highly enriched in translation-related genes. Furthermore, two distinct adaptive mutations converge on concordant transcriptional changes, including increased population heterogeneity in the expression of several genes. Cells with extreme expression of these genes showed dramatic differences in persistence rates, enabling isolation of subpopulations in which a substantial fraction of cells are persisters. Expression analysis reveals coherent regulation of specific pathways that may be critical to establishing the hyperpersistence state. Hyperpersister mutants can thus enable the systematic molecular characterization of this unique physiological state, a critical prerequisite for developing antipersistence strategies.https://doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00847-19escherichia coliantibiotic persistencegene expression heterogeneitylaboratory evolutionpersisterssystems biologytranslation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anupama Khare
Saeed Tavazoie
spellingShingle Anupama Khare
Saeed Tavazoie
Extreme Antibiotic Persistence via Heterogeneity-Generating Mutations Targeting Translation
mSystems
escherichia coli
antibiotic persistence
gene expression heterogeneity
laboratory evolution
persisters
systems biology
translation
author_facet Anupama Khare
Saeed Tavazoie
author_sort Anupama Khare
title Extreme Antibiotic Persistence via Heterogeneity-Generating Mutations Targeting Translation
title_short Extreme Antibiotic Persistence via Heterogeneity-Generating Mutations Targeting Translation
title_full Extreme Antibiotic Persistence via Heterogeneity-Generating Mutations Targeting Translation
title_fullStr Extreme Antibiotic Persistence via Heterogeneity-Generating Mutations Targeting Translation
title_full_unstemmed Extreme Antibiotic Persistence via Heterogeneity-Generating Mutations Targeting Translation
title_sort extreme antibiotic persistence via heterogeneity-generating mutations targeting translation
publisher American Society for Microbiology
series mSystems
issn 2379-5077
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Bacterial persistence is a fascinating phenomenon in which a small subpopulation of bacteria becomes phenotypically tolerant to lethal antibiotic exposure. There is growing evidence that populations of bacteria in chronic clinical infections develop a hyperpersistent phenotype, enabling a substantially larger subpopulation to survive repeated antibiotic treatment. The mechanisms of persistence and modes of increasing persistence rates remain largely unknown. Here, we utilized experimental evolution to select for Escherichia coli mutants that have more than a thousandfold increase in persistence rates. We discovered that a variety of individual mutations to translation-related processes are causally involved. Furthermore, we found that these mutations lead to population heterogeneity in the expression of specific genes. We show that this can be used to isolate populations in which the majority of bacteria are persisters, thereby enabling systems-level characterization of this fascinating and clinically significant microbial phenomenon.Antibiotic persistence, the noninherited tolerance of a subpopulation of bacteria to high levels of antibiotics, is a bet-hedging phenomenon with broad clinical implications. Indeed, the isolation of bacteria with substantially increased persistence rates from chronic infections suggests that evolution of hyperpersistence is a significant factor in clinical therapy resistance. However, the pathways that lead to hyperpersistence and the underlying cellular states have yet to be systematically studied. Here, we show that laboratory evolution can lead to increase in persistence rates by orders of magnitude for multiple independently evolved populations of Escherichia coli and that the driving mutations are highly enriched in translation-related genes. Furthermore, two distinct adaptive mutations converge on concordant transcriptional changes, including increased population heterogeneity in the expression of several genes. Cells with extreme expression of these genes showed dramatic differences in persistence rates, enabling isolation of subpopulations in which a substantial fraction of cells are persisters. Expression analysis reveals coherent regulation of specific pathways that may be critical to establishing the hyperpersistence state. Hyperpersister mutants can thus enable the systematic molecular characterization of this unique physiological state, a critical prerequisite for developing antipersistence strategies.
topic escherichia coli
antibiotic persistence
gene expression heterogeneity
laboratory evolution
persisters
systems biology
translation
url https://doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00847-19
work_keys_str_mv AT anupamakhare extremeantibioticpersistenceviaheterogeneitygeneratingmutationstargetingtranslation
AT saeedtavazoie extremeantibioticpersistenceviaheterogeneitygeneratingmutationstargetingtranslation
_version_ 1715199272685666304