Abstract

Efflux pumps are critically important membrane components that play a crucial role in strain tolerance in Pseudomonas putida to antibiotics and aromatic hydrocarbons that result in these toxicants being expelled from the bacteria. Here, the effect of propranolol on P. putida was examined by sudden addition of 0.2, 0.4 and 0.6 mg mL-1 of this β-blocker to several strains of P. putida, including the wild type DOT-T1E and the efflux pump knockout mutants DOT-T1E-PS28 and DOT-T1E-18. Bacterial viability measurements reveal that the efflux pump TtgABC plays a more important role than the TtgGHI pump in strain tolerance to propranolol. Mid-infrared (MIR) spectroscopy was then used as a rapid, high-throughput screening tool to investigate any phenotypic changes resulting from exposure to varying levels of propranolol. Multivariate statistical analysis of these MIR data revealed gradient trends in resultant ordination scores plots, which were related to the concentration of propranolol. MIR illustrated phenotypic changes associated with the presence of this drug within the cell that could be assigned to significant changes that occurred within the bacterial protein components. To complement this phenotypic fingerprinting approach metabolic profiling was performed using gas chromatography mass spectrometry (GC-MS) to identify metabolites of interest during the growth of bacteria following toxic perturbation with the same concentration levels of propranolol. Metabolic profiling revealed that ornithine, which was only produced by P. putida cells in the presence of propranolol, presents itself as a major metabolic feature that has important functions in propranolol stress tolerance mechanisms within this highly significant and environmentally relevant species of bacteria.

Highlights

  • Active pharmaceutical compounds (APCs), in their original states or their metabolites, are ubiquitous in the environment [1], and the levels of APCs in the aquatic ecosystems

  • Whilst under the same conditions, the mutant DOT-T1E-18 grew slightly poorly in comparison to the other strains. This result was in agreement with previous observations which show that P. putida DOT-T1E-PS28 grew on Lysogeny broth (LB) medium and had similar growth generation time to the wild type [27]

  • The mutant DOT-T1E-18 showed less growth compared to the wild-type and this could be a result of the waste products made during cellular metabolic processes accumulating to toxic levels due to the lack of TtgABC pump, resulting in slower growth

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of this study was to investigate the changes in metabolite levels within P. putida DOT-T1E strains in the presence and absence of propranolol and determine if these changes were associated to efflux pumps or other adaptation mechanisms within these bacteria

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Results
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