endopromag
Advertisement
  • Home
  • News
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
  • Online Content
    • Articles
    • References
    • Education
    • Products
    • Videos
  • Subscribe
  • About us
  • Contact us
No Result
View All Result
endopromag
No Result
View All Result
Home Antibiotic Resistance

Timing is key for bacteria surviving antibiotics

endopromag_adn by endopromag_adn
October 8, 2023
in Antibiotic Resistance, Infection Prevention, News, Research, Studies
0
Timing is key for bacteria surviving antibiotics
74
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

For bacteria facing a dose of antibiotics, timing might be the key to evading destruction. In a series of experiments, Princeton researchers found that cells that repaired DNA damaged by antibiotics before resuming growth had a much better chance of surviving treatment.

When antibiotics hit a population of bacteria, often a small fraction of “persister” cells survive to pose a threat of recurrent infection. Unlike bacteria with genetic resistance to antibiotics, evidence suggests that persisters stay alive in part by stalling cellular processes targeted by the drugs.

In a new study, Princeton researchers examined a class of antibiotics that target bacterial DNA. In bacterial populations, some cells repair damaged DNA before resuming growth, and others resume growth before making repairs. The researchers found that those that make repairs before resuming growth generally are the ones that survive as persisters. The research advances a long-term goal to make antibiotic treatment more effective.

In results published June 18 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Wendy Mok, a post-doctoral researcher, and Mark Brynildsen, an associate professor of chemical and biological engineering, analyzed the responses of E. coli bacteria to treatment with ofloxacin, an antibiotic that causes DNA damage by blocking enzymes needed for DNA replication and RNA transcription. Their work built on previous results from Brynildsen’s lab, which revealed that persisters to ofloxacin required DNA repair machinery to survive.

“But that doesn’t guarantee that they’re necessarily going to survive,” said Mok. “We hypothesized that the timing of DNA repair and the resumption of growth-related activities like DNA synthesis could impact the survival of persisters after treatment.”

To test this hypothesis, Mok and Brynildsen used a strain of E. coli bacteria that had been genetically engineered to allow researchers to control the cells’ growth. The researchers used the bacteria to create a uniform population of cells with stalled growth that could tolerate the ofloxacin antibiotic.

These non-growing cells, they found, experienced DNA damage similar to growing cells treated with ofloxacin. However, the non-growing cells showed delays in resuming DNA synthesis and repair following treatment.

By controlling the activity of a key DNA repair protein, RecA, the researchers tested the effect of further delaying DNA repair until after the resumption of DNA synthesis. This led to a sevenfold decrease in survival compared to cells that continuously produced RecA, demonstrating that persistence to ofloxacin depends on repairing DNA damage before synthesizing the new DNA necessary for growth.

Mok and Brynildsen then examined persistence in normal cells placed in a low-nutrient environment to stall their growth, simulating a condition that bacteria frequently encounter within an infected host. Indeed, following ofloxacin treatment, if cells were starved of carbon sources for at least three hours, they observed nearly complete tolerance to the antibiotic. This tolerance depended on effective DNA repair processes. They also observed enhanced persistence toward ofloxacin with nutrient deprivation after treatment among cells growing in biofilms, which are groups of bacteria that stick to surfaces and are implicated in a majority of hospital-treated bacterial infections.

Jan Michiels, a professor of microbiology at the University of Leuven-VIB in Belgium, said the study used “an elegant model system” to probe the underlying mechanisms of persistence. Michiels, who was not involved in the research, said it represents “a landmark discovery providing new fundamental insights into how persister cells avoid death.”

Ofloxacin and other similar antibiotics are included on the World Health Organization’s Model List of Essential Medicines, a catalog of the most important drugs for meeting health care needs. Curbing bacterial persistence could be a promising route to making these therapies more effective against urinary tract infections, staph infections and other bacterial diseases.

“Nutrient starvation is a stress that bacteria can routinely encounter at an infection site,” said Mok. “Our results suggest that in the period after antibiotic treatment we can consider looking at targeting some of these DNA repair processes, and see whether that can improve treatment outcome.” One counterintuitive approach might be to speed up bacterial growth following antibiotic treatment, thereby dooming the cells to outpace their repair mechanisms and die. However, the researchers added that other approaches would likely be better than fostering the growth of a pathogen in a patient.

Brynildsen’s group and others are interested in finding potential drug compounds that may interfere with bacterial DNA repair, as well as examining the relationship between antibiotic tolerance and genetic resistance.

Source: Princeton University, Engineering School

Tags: News
Share30Tweet19

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Browse by Category

ADVERTISEMENT

Related News

Swanky Athletic Socks

Swanky Athletic Socks

October 23, 2023
Video Inspection Scope with Display

Video Inspection Scope with Display

October 23, 2023
Researchers improve screening rates for West Virginia’s second-deadliest cancer

Researchers improve screening rates for West Virginia’s second-deadliest cancer

October 8, 2023

Tags

AAMI AORN Award Bacteria BIOCHEMISTRY biology cancer CBSPD Chemotherapy colon cancer colorectal cancer colorectal cancer screening COVID-19 CRC Digestive Health Duodenoscope Education EndoPro Magazine Endoscope Endoscopy FDA gastroenterology gastrointestinal disorders Genetics GI Healthcare Healthmark IAHCSMM IBD IBS Infections Internal medicine irritable bowel syndrome Medicine MEDICINE/HEALTH Microbiology News Nursing polyps PPE Public Health recall Screening SGNA Studies
endopromag

EndoPro Magazine is the award winning advocate for today’s endoscopy profession. We are the go-to source for endoscopy nurses, technicians, and their colleagues in hospitals, ambulatory care centers, and free-standing endoscopy facilities in the United States and abroad.

Browse by Topic

Anal CancerAntibiotic Resistance

C. diffCancerCentral Services

ColitisDiet/Body WeightEquipment

ERCPGastroenterologyView All

Current Issue

CURRENT ISSUE CURRENT ISSUE CURRENT ISSUE

© 2023 Copyright. All Rights Reserved. Design & Developed by Insightful Technologies.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
  • Online Content
    • Articles
    • References
    • Education
    • Products
    • Videos
  • Subscribe
  • About us
  • Contact us

© 2023 Copyright. All Rights Reserved. Design & Developed by Insightful Technologies.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?
Go to mobile version