Abstract
BackgroundThe ability of bacteria to rapidly evolve resistance to antibiotics is a critical public health problem. Resistance leads to increased disease severity and death rates, as well as imposes pressure towards the discovery and development of new antibiotic therapies. Improving understanding of the evolution and genetic basis of resistance is a fundamental goal in the field of microbiology.ResultsWe have applied a new genomic method, Scalar Analysis of Library Enrichments (SCALEs), to identify genomic regions that, given increased copy number, may lead to aminoglycoside resistance in Pseudomonas aeruginosa at the genome scale. We report the result of selections on highly representative genomic libraries for three different aminoglycoside antibiotics (amikacin, gentamicin, and tobramycin). At the genome-scale, we show significant (p<0.05) overlap in genes identified for each aminoglycoside evaluated. Among the genomic segments identified, we confirmed increased resistance associated with an increased copy number of several genomic regions, including the ORF of PA5471, recently implicated in MexXY efflux pump related aminoglycoside resistance, PA4943-PA4946 (encoding a probable GTP-binding protein, a predicted host factor I protein, a δ 2-isopentenylpyrophosphate transferase, and DNA mismatch repair protein mutL), PA0960–PA0963 (encoding hypothetical proteins, a probable cold shock protein, a probable DNA-binding stress protein, and aspartyl-tRNA synthetase), a segment of PA4967 (encoding a topoisomerase IV subunit B), as well as a chimeric clone containing two inserts including the ORFs PA0547 and PA2326 (encoding a probable transcriptional regulator and a probable hypothetical protein, respectively).ConclusionsThe studies reported here demonstrate the application of new a genomic method, SCALEs, which can be used to improve understanding of the evolution of antibiotic resistance in P. aeruginosa. In our demonstration studies, we identified a significant number of genomic regions that increased resistance to multiple aminoglycosides. We identified genetic regions that include open reading frames that encode for products from many functional categories, including genes related to O-antigen synthesis, DNA repair, and transcriptional and translational processes.
Highlights
The objective of this work is to adapt the SCalar Analysis of Library Enrichments (SCALEs) method [1] for use in Pseudomonas aeruginosa
The aspiration is that this genomic tool would allow the genome-wide identification of a large number of intrinsic genomic regions and genes related to antibiotic resistance or the evolution of resistance
The overall objective of this work was to adapt the SCALEs methodology to identify at the genome-scale a reservoir of potential aminoglycoside resistance genes present in P. aeruginosa
Summary
The objective of this work is to adapt the SCalar Analysis of Library Enrichments (SCALEs) method [1] for use in Pseudomonas aeruginosa. We examined the system of genetic regions related to resistance of P. aeruginosa to the aminoglycoside class of antibiotics. This is the first work in which SCALEs, with modification, has been applied to an organism other than E. coli. The process of evolving new resistance phenotypes (aside from the acquisition of new genetic material) depends upon the reservoir of potential resistance genes maintained within a particular bacterium [9,10,11]. Improving understanding of the evolution and genetic basis of resistance is a fundamental goal in the field of microbiology
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