Abstract

Fatty acids salts exhibit bacteriostatic and bactericidal effects to inhibit bacterial growth and survival. Bacteria adapt to their environment to overcome these antibacterial effects through undefined mechanisms. In Gram-negative bacteria, drug efflux systems are associated with resistance to various substances. Studies have identified multiple drug efflux systems in Salmonella enterica. The aim of this study was to investigate whether drug efflux systems contribute to fatty acid salts resistance in S. enterica. We used deletion and overexpressing strains of S. enterica for drug efflux transporters. Susceptibility to fatty acid salts was determined by measuring minimum inhibitory concentrations and performing growth assays. Our findings revealed that acrAB, acrEF, emrAB and tolC in S. enterica contribute resistance to fatty acid salts. Furthermore, EmrAB, which is known to function with TolC, contributes to the fatty acid salts resistance of S. enterica in a TolC-independent manner. This study revealed that drug efflux systems confer fatty acid satls resistance to S. enterica. Notably, although EmrAB is normally associated with antimicrobial resistance in a TolC-dependent manner, it was found to be involved in fatty acid salts resistance in a TolC-independent manner, indicating that the utilization of TolC by EmrAB is substrate dependent in S. enterica.

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