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Carbonic Anhydrase Inhibition as a Target for Antibiotic Synergy in Enterococci

Enterococcus faecalis is a hospital-associated opportunistic pathogen that can cause infections with high mortality, such as infective endocarditis. With an increasing occurrence of multidrug-resistant enterococci, there is a need for alternative strategies to treat enterococcal infections. We isola...

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Autores principales: Chilambi, Gayatri Shankar, Wang, Yu-Hao, Wallace, Nathan R., Obiwuma, Chetachukwu, Evans, Kirsten M., Li, Yanhong, Shalaby, Menna-Allah W., Flaherty, Daniel P., Shields, Ryan K., Doi, Yohei, Van Tyne, Daria
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10434275/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37260400
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.03963-22
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author Chilambi, Gayatri Shankar
Wang, Yu-Hao
Wallace, Nathan R.
Obiwuma, Chetachukwu
Evans, Kirsten M.
Li, Yanhong
Shalaby, Menna-Allah W.
Flaherty, Daniel P.
Shields, Ryan K.
Doi, Yohei
Van Tyne, Daria
author_facet Chilambi, Gayatri Shankar
Wang, Yu-Hao
Wallace, Nathan R.
Obiwuma, Chetachukwu
Evans, Kirsten M.
Li, Yanhong
Shalaby, Menna-Allah W.
Flaherty, Daniel P.
Shields, Ryan K.
Doi, Yohei
Van Tyne, Daria
author_sort Chilambi, Gayatri Shankar
collection PubMed
description Enterococcus faecalis is a hospital-associated opportunistic pathogen that can cause infections with high mortality, such as infective endocarditis. With an increasing occurrence of multidrug-resistant enterococci, there is a need for alternative strategies to treat enterococcal infections. We isolated a gentamicin-hypersusceptible E. faecalis strain from a patient with infective endocarditis that carried a mutation in the alpha-carbonic anhydrase (α-CA) and investigated how disruption of α-CA sensitized E. faecalis to killing with gentamicin. The gentamicin-hypersusceptible α-CA mutant strain showed increased intracellular gentamicin uptake in comparison to an isogenic strain encoding full-length, wild-type α-CA. We hypothesized that increased gentamicin uptake could be due to increased proton motive force (PMF), increased membrane permeability, or both. We observed increased intracellular ATP production in the α-CA mutant strain, suggesting increased PMF-driven gentamicin uptake contributed to the strain’s gentamicin susceptibility. We also analyzed the membrane permeability and fatty acid composition of isogenic wild-type and α-CA mutant strains and found that the mutant displayed a membrane composition that was consistent with increased membrane permeability. Finally, we observed that exposure to the FDA-approved α-CA inhibitor acetazolamide lowered the gentamicin MIC of eight genetically diverse E. faecalis strains with intact α-CA but did not change the MIC of the α-CA mutant strain. These results suggest that α-CA mutation or inhibition increases PMF and alters membrane permeability, leading to increased uptake of gentamicin into E. faecalis. This connection could be exploited clinically to provide new combination therapies for patients with enterococcal infections. IMPORTANCE Enterococcal infections can be difficult to treat, and new therapeutic approaches are needed. In studying an E. faecalis clinical strain from an infected patient, we found that the bacteria were rendered hypersusceptible to aminoglycoside antibiotics through a mutation that disrupted the α-CA. Our follow-on work suggested two different ways that α-CA disruption causes increased gentamicin accumulation in E. faecalis: increased proton motive force-powered uptake and increased membrane permeability. We also found that a mammalian CA inhibitor could sensitize a variety of E. faecalis strains to killing with gentamicin. Given that mammalian CA inhibitors are frequently used to treat conditions such as glaucoma, hypertension, and epilepsy, our findings suggest that these “off-the-shelf” inhibitors could also be useful partner antibiotics for the treatment of E. faecalis infections.
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spelling pubmed-104342752023-08-18 Carbonic Anhydrase Inhibition as a Target for Antibiotic Synergy in Enterococci Chilambi, Gayatri Shankar Wang, Yu-Hao Wallace, Nathan R. Obiwuma, Chetachukwu Evans, Kirsten M. Li, Yanhong Shalaby, Menna-Allah W. Flaherty, Daniel P. Shields, Ryan K. Doi, Yohei Van Tyne, Daria Microbiol Spectr Research Article Enterococcus faecalis is a hospital-associated opportunistic pathogen that can cause infections with high mortality, such as infective endocarditis. With an increasing occurrence of multidrug-resistant enterococci, there is a need for alternative strategies to treat enterococcal infections. We isolated a gentamicin-hypersusceptible E. faecalis strain from a patient with infective endocarditis that carried a mutation in the alpha-carbonic anhydrase (α-CA) and investigated how disruption of α-CA sensitized E. faecalis to killing with gentamicin. The gentamicin-hypersusceptible α-CA mutant strain showed increased intracellular gentamicin uptake in comparison to an isogenic strain encoding full-length, wild-type α-CA. We hypothesized that increased gentamicin uptake could be due to increased proton motive force (PMF), increased membrane permeability, or both. We observed increased intracellular ATP production in the α-CA mutant strain, suggesting increased PMF-driven gentamicin uptake contributed to the strain’s gentamicin susceptibility. We also analyzed the membrane permeability and fatty acid composition of isogenic wild-type and α-CA mutant strains and found that the mutant displayed a membrane composition that was consistent with increased membrane permeability. Finally, we observed that exposure to the FDA-approved α-CA inhibitor acetazolamide lowered the gentamicin MIC of eight genetically diverse E. faecalis strains with intact α-CA but did not change the MIC of the α-CA mutant strain. These results suggest that α-CA mutation or inhibition increases PMF and alters membrane permeability, leading to increased uptake of gentamicin into E. faecalis. This connection could be exploited clinically to provide new combination therapies for patients with enterococcal infections. IMPORTANCE Enterococcal infections can be difficult to treat, and new therapeutic approaches are needed. In studying an E. faecalis clinical strain from an infected patient, we found that the bacteria were rendered hypersusceptible to aminoglycoside antibiotics through a mutation that disrupted the α-CA. Our follow-on work suggested two different ways that α-CA disruption causes increased gentamicin accumulation in E. faecalis: increased proton motive force-powered uptake and increased membrane permeability. We also found that a mammalian CA inhibitor could sensitize a variety of E. faecalis strains to killing with gentamicin. Given that mammalian CA inhibitors are frequently used to treat conditions such as glaucoma, hypertension, and epilepsy, our findings suggest that these “off-the-shelf” inhibitors could also be useful partner antibiotics for the treatment of E. faecalis infections. American Society for Microbiology 2023-06-01 /pmc/articles/PMC10434275/ /pubmed/37260400 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.03963-22 Text en Copyright © 2023 Chilambi et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Chilambi, Gayatri Shankar
Wang, Yu-Hao
Wallace, Nathan R.
Obiwuma, Chetachukwu
Evans, Kirsten M.
Li, Yanhong
Shalaby, Menna-Allah W.
Flaherty, Daniel P.
Shields, Ryan K.
Doi, Yohei
Van Tyne, Daria
Carbonic Anhydrase Inhibition as a Target for Antibiotic Synergy in Enterococci
title Carbonic Anhydrase Inhibition as a Target for Antibiotic Synergy in Enterococci
title_full Carbonic Anhydrase Inhibition as a Target for Antibiotic Synergy in Enterococci
title_fullStr Carbonic Anhydrase Inhibition as a Target for Antibiotic Synergy in Enterococci
title_full_unstemmed Carbonic Anhydrase Inhibition as a Target for Antibiotic Synergy in Enterococci
title_short Carbonic Anhydrase Inhibition as a Target for Antibiotic Synergy in Enterococci
title_sort carbonic anhydrase inhibition as a target for antibiotic synergy in enterococci
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10434275/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37260400
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.03963-22
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