Abstract

Bacterial persisters exhibit noninherited antibiotic tolerance and are linked to the recalcitrance of bacterial infections. It is very urgent but also challenging to develop antipersister strategies. Here, we report that 10-s freezing with liquid nitrogen dramatically enhances the bactericidal action of aminoglycoside antibiotics by 2 to 6 orders of magnitude against many Gram-negative pathogens, with weaker potentiation effects on Gram-positive bacteria. In particular, antibiotic-tolerant Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa persisters-which were prepared by treating exponential-phase cells with ampicillin, ofloxacin, the protonophore cyanide m-chlorophenyl hydrazone (CCCP), or bacteriostatic antibiotics-can be effectively killed. We demonstrated, as a proof of concept, that freezing potentiated the aminoglycosides' killing of P. aeruginosa persisters in a mouse acute skin wound model. Mechanistically, freezing dramatically increased the bacterial uptake of aminoglycosides regardless of the presence of CCCP, indicating that the effects are independent of the proton motive force (PMF). In line with these results, we found that the effects were linked to freezing-induced cell membrane damage and were attributable, at least partly, to the mechanosensitive ion channel MscL, which was able to directly mediate such freezing-enhanced aminoglycoside uptake. In view of these results, we propose that the freezing-induced aminoglycoside potentiation is achieved by freezing-induced cell membrane destabilization, which, in turn, activates the MscL channel, which is able to effectively take up aminoglycosides in a PMF-independent manner. Our work may pave the way for the development of antipersister strategies that utilize the same mechanism as freezing but do so without causing any injury to animal cells.IMPORTANCE Antibiotics have long been used to successfully kill bacterial pathogens, but antibiotic resistance/tolerance usually has led to the failure of antibiotic therapy, and it has become a severe threat to human health. How to improve the efficacy of existing antibiotics is of importance for combating antibiotic-resistant/tolerant pathogens. Here, we report that 10-s rapid freezing with liquid nitrogen dramatically enhanced the bactericidal action of aminoglycoside antibiotics by 2 to 6 orders of magnitude against many bacterial pathogens in vitro and also in a mouse skin wound model. In particular, such combined treatment was able to effectively kill persister cells of Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which are per se tolerant of conventional treatment with bactericidal antibiotics for several hours. We also demonstrated that freezing-induced aminoglycoside potentiation was apparently linked to freezing-induced cell membrane damage that may have activated the mechanosensitive ion channel MscL, which, in turn, was able to effectively uptake aminoglycoside antibiotics in a proton motive force-independent manner. Our report sheds light on the development of a new strategy against bacterial pathogens by combining existing antibiotics with a conventional physical treatment or with MscL agonists.

Highlights

  • Bacterial persisters exhibit noninherited antibiotic tolerance and are linked to the recalcitrance of bacterial infections

  • Persister Eradication by Freezing and Aminoglycoside reported that application of hypoionic shock for only 1 min was able to enhance the bactericidal efficacy of aminoglycoside antibiotics against E. coli stationary-phase cells by 4 to 5 orders of magnitude [25]

  • We found that freezing was able to significantly enhance the efficacy of aminoglycoside antibiotics in killing E. coli cells, while other treatments were found to have severe side effects and/or little synergistic effect with aminoglycosides

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Summary

Introduction

Bacterial persisters exhibit noninherited antibiotic tolerance and are linked to the recalcitrance of bacterial infections. Freezing dramatically increased the bacterial uptake of aminoglycosides regardless of the presence of CCCP, indicating that the effects are independent of the proton motive force (PMF) In line with these results, we found that the effects were linked to freezing-induced cell membrane damage and were attributable, at least partly, to the mechanosensitive ion channel MscL, which was able to directly mediate such freezing-enhanced aminoglycoside uptake. We report that 10-s rapid freezing with liquid nitrogen dramatically enhanced the bactericidal action of aminoglycoside antibiotics by 2 to 6 orders of magnitude against many bacterial pathogens in vitro and in a mouse skin wound model Such combined treatment was able to effectively kill persister cells of Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which are per se tolerant of conventional treatment with bactericidal antibiotics for several hours. This reflects both scientific and financial barriers to the identification of new antibiotics, and the need to develop other strategies to fight antibiotic resistance is very urgent

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