Abstract
Penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs) are enzymes responsible for the polymerization of the glycan strand and the cross-linking between glycan chains as well as the target proteins for β-lactam antibiotics. Mutational alterations in PBPs can confer resistance either by reducing binding of the antibiotic to the active site or by evolving a β-lactamase activity that degrades the antibiotic. As no systematic studies have been performed to examine the potential of all PBPs present in one bacterial species to evolve increased resistance against β-lactam antibiotics, we explored the ability of fifteen different defined or putative PBPs in Salmonella enterica to acquire increased resistance against penicillin G. We could after mutagenesis and selection in presence of penicillin G isolate mutants with amino-acid substitutions in the PBPs, FtsI, DacB and DacC (corresponding to PBP3, PBP4 and PBP6) with increased resistance against β-lactam antibiotics. Our results suggest that: (i) most evolved PBPs became ‘generalists” with increased resistance against several different classes of β-lactam antibiotics, (ii) synergistic interactions between mutations conferring antibiotic resistance are common and (iii) the mechanism of resistance of these mutants could be to make the active site more accessible for water allowing hydrolysis or less binding to β-lactam antibiotics.
Highlights
The bacterial peptidoglycan, a three-dimensional, net-like mesh, is the major constituent of the cell wall [1]
Penicillinbinding proteins (PBPs) are a family of enzymes that are responsible for the polymerization of the glycan strand and the cross-linking between glycan chains [2]
These proteins are referred as PBPs due to their ability to bind to b-lactam antibiotics [3,4] and based on their molecular weights, PBPs can be classified into two groups: low molecular weight PBPs and high molecular weight PBPs, each of which is subdivided into three classes based on amino-acid sequence similarities [5]
Summary
The bacterial peptidoglycan, a three-dimensional, net-like mesh, is the major constituent of the cell wall [1]. After constructing and cloning the mutagenesis libraries into the Salmonella typhimurium LT2 strains, for three PBPs, FtsI, DacB and DacC, corresponding to PBP3, PBP4 and PBP6, respectively, we isolated mutants with increased resistance against penicillin G.
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