Abstract

ABSTRACTIn bacteria, the defense system deployed to counter oxidative stress is orchestrated by three transcriptional factors, SoxS, SoxR, and OxyR. Although the regulon that these factors control is known in many bacteria, similar data are not available for Klebsiella pneumoniae. To address this data gap, oxidative stress was artificially induced in K. pneumoniae MGH78578 using paraquat and the corresponding oxidative stress regulon recorded using transcriptome sequencing (RNA-seq). The soxS gene was significantly induced during oxidative stress, and a knockout mutant was constructed to explore its functionality. The wild type and mutant were grown in the presence of paraquat and subjected to RNA-seq to elucidate the soxS regulon in K. pneumoniae MGH78578. Genes that are commonly regulated both in the oxidative stress and soxS regulons were identified and denoted as the oxidative SoxS regulon; these included a group of genes specifically regulated by SoxS. Efflux pump-encoding genes and global regulators were identified as part of this regulon. Consequently, the isogenic soxS mutant was found to exhibit a reduction in the minimum bactericidal concentration against tetracycline compared to that of the wild type. Impaired efflux activity, allowing tetracycline to be accumulated in the cytoplasm to bactericidal levels, was further evaluated using a tetraphenylphosphonium (TPP+) accumulation assay. The soxS mutant was also susceptible to tetracycline in vivo in a zebrafish embryo model. We conclude that the soxS gene could be considered a genetic target against which an inhibitor could be developed and used in combinatorial therapy to combat infections associated with multidrug-resistant K. pneumoniae.

Highlights

  • IMPORTANCE Antimicrobial resistance is a global health challenge

  • Apart from elucidating the PQ oxidative stress regulon and the oxidative SoxS regulon, we propose that a combination of tetracycline and an SoxS inhibitor can be used to treat infections associated with MDR K. pneumoniae

  • A decade ago it was shown that bactericidal antibiotics kill bacteria by unleashing intracellular oxidative stress, a phenomenon independent of the antibacterial action mechanism of mbio.asm.org antibiotics [24, 43, 44], that harnesses reactive oxygen species (ROS) as an effective antibacterial strategy [45]

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Summary

Introduction

Few new antibiotics have been developed for use over the years, and preserving the efficacy of existing compounds is an important step to protect public health. This paper describes a study that examines the effects of exogenously induced oxidative stress on K. pneumoniae and uncovers a target that could be useful to harness as a strategy to mitigate resistance. Different ROS will oxidize macromolecules (such as DNA, proteins, and lipids) and extract iron from proteins containing iron-sulfur clusters, creating a highly reactive HOÁ-rich intracellular environment [1, 2] detrimental for bacteria. To survive the effects of ROS, bacteria deploy a variety of adaptive responses. These are well-characterized in bacteria like Escherichia coli [3] but, as yet, not in Klebsiella pneumoniae

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