RESUMO
Multidrug efflux pumps are the frontline defense mechanisms of Gram-negative bacteria, yet little is known of their relative fitness trade-offs under gut conditions such as low pH and the presence of antimicrobial food molecules. Low pH contributes to the proton-motive force (PMF) that drives most efflux pumps. We show how the PMF-dependent pumps AcrAB-TolC, MdtEF-TolC, and EmrAB-TolC undergo selection at low pH and in the presence of membrane-permeant phytochemicals. Competition assays were performed by flow cytometry of co-cultured Escherichia coli K-12 strains possessing or lacking a given pump complex. All three pumps showed negative selection under conditions that deplete PMF (pH 5.5 with carbonyl cyanide 3-chlorophenylhydrazone or at pH 8.0). At pH 5.5, selection against AcrAB-TolC was increased by aromatic acids, alcohols, and related phytochemicals such as methyl salicylate. The degree of fitness cost for AcrA was correlated with the phytochemical's lipophilicity (logP). Methyl salicylate and salicylamide selected strongly against AcrA, without genetic induction of drug resistance regulons. MdtEF-TolC and EmrAB-TolC each had a fitness cost at pH 5.5, but salicylate or benzoate made the fitness contribution positive. Pump fitness effects were not explained by gene expression (measured by digital PCR). Between pH 5.5 and 8.0, acrA and emrA were upregulated in the log phase, whereas mdtE expression was upregulated in the transition-to-stationary phase and at pH 5.5 in the log phase. Methyl salicylate did not affect pump gene expression. Our results suggest that lipophilic non-acidic molecules select against a major efflux pump without inducing antibiotic resistance regulons.IMPORTANCEFor drugs that are administered orally, we need to understand how ingested phytochemicals modulate drug resistance in our gut microbiome. Bacteria maintain low-level resistance by proton-motive force (PMF)-driven pumps that efflux many different antibiotics and cell waste products. These pumps play a key role in bacterial defense by conferring resistance to antimicrobial agents at first exposure while providing time for a pathogen to evolve resistance to higher levels of the antibiotic exposed. Nevertheless, efflux pumps confer energetic costs due to gene expression and pump energy expense. The bacterial PMF includes the transmembrane pH difference (ΔpH), which may be depleted by permeant acids and membrane disruptors. Understanding the fitness costs of efflux pumps may enable us to develop resistance breakers, that is, molecules that work together with antibiotics to potentiate their effect. Non-acidic aromatic molecules have the advantage that they avoid the Mar-dependent induction of regulons conferring other forms of drug resistance. We show that different pumps have distinct selection criteria, and we identified non-acidic aromatic molecules as promising candidates for drug resistance breakers.
Assuntos
Escherichia coli K12 , Proteínas de Escherichia coli , Escherichia coli/genética , Salicilatos/metabolismo , Proteínas de Escherichia coli/genética , Proteínas de Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Antibacterianos/farmacologia , Antibacterianos/metabolismo , Testes de Sensibilidade MicrobianaRESUMO
Bacterial genomes encode various multidrug efflux pumps (MDR) whose specific conditions for fitness advantage are unknown. We show that the efflux pump MdtEF-TolC, in Escherichia coli, confers a fitness advantage during exposure to extreme acid (pH 2). Our flow cytometry method revealed pH-dependent fitness trade-offs between bile acids (a major pump substrate) and salicylic acid, a membrane-permeant aromatic acid that induces a drug resistance regulon but depletes proton motive force (PMF). The PMF drives MdtEF-TolC and related pumps such as AcrAB-TolC. Deletion of mdtE (with loss of the pump MdtEF-TolC) increased the strain's relative fitness during growth with or without salicylate or bile acids. However, when the growth cycle included a 2-h incubation at pH 2 (below the pH growth range), MdtEF-TolC conferred a fitness advantage. The fitness advantage required bile salts but was decreased by the presence of salicylate, whose uptake is amplified by acid. For comparison, AcrAB-TolC, the primary efflux pump for bile acids, conferred a PMF-dependent fitness advantage with or without acid exposure in the growth cycle. A different MDR pump, EmrAB-TolC, conferred no selective benefit during growth in the presence of bile acids. Without bile acids, all three MDR pumps incurred a large fitness cost with salicylate when exposed at pH 2. These results are consistent with the increased uptake of salicylate at low pH. Overall, we showed that MdtEF-TolC is an MDR pump adapted for transient extreme-acid exposure and that low pH amplifies the salicylate-dependent fitness cost for drug pumps. IMPORTANCE Antibiotics and other drugs that reach the gut must pass through stomach acid. However, little is known of how extreme acid modulates the effect of drugs on gut bacteria. We find that extreme-acid exposure leads to a fitness advantage for a multidrug pump that otherwise incurs a fitness cost. At the same time, extreme acid amplifies the effect of salicylate selection against multidrug pumps. Thus, organic acids and stomach acid could play important roles in regulating multidrug resistance in the gut microbiome. Our flow cytometry assay provides a way to measure the fitness effects of extreme-acid exposure to various membrane-soluble organic acids, including plant-derived nutrients and pharmaceutical agents. Therapeutic acids might be devised to control the prevalence of multidrug pumps in environmental and host-associated habitats.