27 research outputs found
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Viral Satellites Exploit Phage Proteins to Escape Degradation of the Bacterial Host Chromosome.
Phage defense systems are often found on mobile genetic elements (MGEs), where they constitutively defend against invaders or are induced to respond to new assaults. Phage satellites, one type of MGE, are induced during phage infection to promote their own transmission, reducing phage production and protecting their hosts in the process. One such satellite in Vibrio cholerae, phage-inducible chromosomal island-like element (PLE), sabotages the lytic phage ICP1, which triggers PLE excision from the bacterial chromosome, replication, and transduction to neighboring cells. Analysis of patient stool samples from different geographic regions revealed that ICP1 has evolved to possess one of two syntenic loci encoding an SF1B-type helicase, either of which PLE exploits to drive replication. Further, loss of PLE mobilization limits anti-phage activity because of phage-mediated degradation of the bacterial genome. Our work provides insight into the unique challenges facing parasites of lytic phages and underscores the adaptions of satellites to their ever-evolving target phage
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Viral Satellites Exploit Phage Proteins to Escape Degradation of the Bacterial Host Chromosome.
Phage defense systems are often found on mobile genetic elements (MGEs), where they constitutively defend against invaders or are induced to respond to new assaults. Phage satellites, one type of MGE, are induced during phage infection to promote their own transmission, reducing phage production and protecting their hosts in the process. One such satellite in Vibrio cholerae, phage-inducible chromosomal island-like element (PLE), sabotages the lytic phage ICP1, which triggers PLE excision from the bacterial chromosome, replication, and transduction to neighboring cells. Analysis of patient stool samples from different geographic regions revealed that ICP1 has evolved to possess one of two syntenic loci encoding an SF1B-type helicase, either of which PLE exploits to drive replication. Further, loss of PLE mobilization limits anti-phage activity because of phage-mediated degradation of the bacterial genome. Our work provides insight into the unique challenges facing parasites of lytic phages and underscores the adaptions of satellites to their ever-evolving target phage
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Colistin-resistant Escherichia coli carrying mcr-1 in food, water, hand rinse, and healthy human gut in Bangladesh.
BackgroundOne of the most significant public health concerns in today's world is the persistent upsurge of infections caused by multidrug resistant bacteria. As a result, clinicians are being forced to intervene with either less effective backup drugs or ones with substantial side-effects. Colistin is a last resort antimicrobial agent for the treatment of infections caused by multi-drug resistant gram-negative bacteria.MethodsEscherichia coli (n = 65) isolated from street food (n = 20), hand rinse (n = 15), surface water (n = 10), and healthy human stool (n = 20) were tested for colistin resistance gene mcr-1 and response to antimicrobial agents. Antimicrobial resistance genes and virulence genes were detected by employing polymerase chain reaction. DNA fingerprinting of the strains were determined by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis.ResultsScreening of E. coli allowed us to confirm colistin resistance marker gene mcr-1 in 13 strains (street food, n = 4; hand rinse, n = 2; surface water, n = 4; and stool, n = 3); and two of these E. coli strains carrying mcr-1 harbored bla TEM gene encoding extended spectrum beta lactamase. Antibiotic assay results revealed all 13 E. coli strains carrying mcr-1 to be multi-drug resistant (MDR), including to colistin. The minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) for colistin ranged from 2 to 6 μg/ml. DNA sequencing confirmed homogeneity of the nucleotide sequence for mcr-1, but the E. coli strains were heterogenous, as confirmed by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis suggesting horizontal transmission of colistin resistance in Bangladesh.ConclusionWidespread dissemination of E. coli strains carrying mcr-1 encoding resistance to colistin in the present study is alarming as this is the last resort drug for the treatment of infections caused by MDR gram-negative bacteria resistant to almost all drugs used commonly
Evolutionary Sweeps of Subviral Parasites and Their Phage Host Bring Unique Parasite Variants and Disappearance of a Phage CRISPR-Cas System.
Vibrio cholerae is a significant threat to global public health in part due to its propensity for large-scale evolutionary sweeps where lineages emerge and are replaced. These sweeps may originate from the Bay of Bengal, where bacteriophage predation and the evolution of antiphage counterdefenses is a recurring theme. The bacteriophage ICP1 is a key predator of epidemic V. cholerae and is notable for acquiring a CRISPR-Cas system to combat PLE, a defensive subviral parasite encoded by its V. cholerae host. Here, we describe the discovery of four previously unknown PLE variants through a retrospective analysis of >3,000 publicly available sequences as well as one additional variant (PLE10) from recent surveillance of cholera patients in Bangladesh. In recent sampling we also observed a lineage sweep of PLE-negative V. cholerae occurring within the patient population in under a year. This shift coincided with a loss of ICP1's CRISPR-Cas system in favor of a previously prevalent PLE-targeting endonuclease called Odn. Interestingly, PLE10 was resistant to ICP1-encoded Odn, yet it was not found in any recent V. cholerae strains. We also identified isolates from within individual patient samples that revealed both mixed PLE(+)/PLE(-) V. cholerae populations and ICP1 strains possessing CRISPR-Cas or Odn with evidence of in situ recombination. These findings reinforce our understanding of the successive nature of V. cholerae evolution and suggest that ongoing surveillance of V. cholerae, ICP1, and PLE in Bangladesh is important for tracking genetic developments relevant to pandemic cholera that can occur over relatively short timescales. IMPORTANCE With 1 to 4 million estimated cases annually, cholera is a disease of serious global concern in regions where access to safe drinking water is limited by inadequate infrastructure, inequity, or natural disaster. The Global Task Force on Cholera Control (GTFCC.org) considers outbreak surveillance to be a primary pillar in the strategy to reduce mortality from cholera worldwide. Therefore, developing a better understanding of temporal evolutionary changes in the causative agent of cholera, Vibrio cholerae, could help in those efforts. The significance of our research is in tracking the genomic shifts that distinguish V. cholerae outbreaks, with specific attention paid to current and historical trends in the arms race between V. cholerae and a cooccurring viral (bacteriophage) predator. Here, we discover additional diversity of a specific phage defense system in epidemic V. cholerae and document the loss of a phage-encoded CRISPR-Cas system, underscoring the dynamic nature of microbial populations across cholera outbreaks
Existence of a novel qepA variant in quinolone resistant Escherichia coli from aquatic habitats of Bangladesh
Abstract Of 19 environmental Escherichia coli (n = 12) and Klebsiella pneumoniae (n = 7) tested for quinolone resistance-related genes qnrA, qnrB, qnrC, qnrS and qepA, four each of E. coli and K. pneumoniae possessed qnrS, and another E. coli isolate possessed a new variant of qepA. This is the first detection of qepA in environmentally dwelling bacteria in Bangladesh
The Antimicrobial Resistance of Enterotoxigenic <i>Escherichia coli</i> from Diarrheal Patients and the Environment in Two Geographically Distinct Rural Areas in Bangladesh over the Years
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is an unprecedented global health challenge, involving the transfer of bacteria and genes between humans and the environment. We simultaneously and longitudinally determined the AMR of enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) strains isolated from diarrheal patients and an aquatic environment over two years from two geographically distinct locations, Coastal Mathbaria and Northern Chhatak in Bangladesh. A total of 60% and 72% of ETEC strains from the patients in Mathbaria and Chhatak, respectively, were multi-drug resistant (MDR) with a high proportion of ETEC resistant to nalidixic acid (80.7%), macrolides (49.1–89.7%), ampicillin (57.9–69%), and trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (55.2%). From the surface water, 68.8% and 30% of ETEC were MDR in Mathbaria and Chhatak, respectively, with a high proportion of ETEC strains resistant to macrolides (87.5–100%), ampicillin (50–75%), ceftriaxone (62.5%), and nalidixic acid (40%). Notably, 80–100% of the ETEC strains were susceptible to tetracycline and quinolones (ciprofloxacin and norfloxacin), both in clinical and aquatic ETEC. The AMR varied by the ETEC toxin types. The patterns of excessive or limited consumption of drugs to treat diarrhea over time in Bangladesh were reflected in the ETEC AMR from the patients and the environment. The high prevalence of MDR-ETEC strains in humans and the environment is of concern, which calls for vaccines and other preventative measures against ETEC
Temporal shifts in antibiotic resistance elements govern phage-pathogen conflicts.
Bacteriophage predation selects for diverse antiphage systems that frequently cluster on mobilizable defense islands in bacterial genomes. However, molecular insight into the reciprocal dynamics of phage-bacterial adaptations in nature is lacking, particularly in clinical contexts where there is need to inform phage therapy efforts and to understand how phages drive pathogen evolution. Using time-shift experiments, we uncovered fluctuations in Vibrio cholerae's resistance to phages in clinical samples. We mapped phage resistance determinants to SXT integrative and conjugative elements (ICEs), which notoriously also confer antibiotic resistance. We found that SXT ICEs, which are widespread in γ-proteobacteria, invariably encode phage defense systems localized to a single hotspot of genetic exchange. We identified mechanisms that allow phage to counter SXT-mediated defense in clinical samples, and document the selection of a novel phage-encoded defense inhibitor. Phage infection stimulates high-frequency SXT ICE conjugation, leading to the concurrent dissemination of phage and antibiotic resistances
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Temporal shifts in antibiotic resistance elements govern phage-pathogen conflicts.
Bacteriophage predation selects for diverse antiphage systems that frequently cluster on mobilizable defense islands in bacterial genomes. However, molecular insight into the reciprocal dynamics of phage-bacterial adaptations in nature is lacking, particularly in clinical contexts where there is need to inform phage therapy efforts and to understand how phages drive pathogen evolution. Using time-shift experiments, we uncovered fluctuations in Vibrio cholerae's resistance to phages in clinical samples. We mapped phage resistance determinants to SXT integrative and conjugative elements (ICEs), which notoriously also confer antibiotic resistance. We found that SXT ICEs, which are widespread in γ-proteobacteria, invariably encode phage defense systems localized to a single hotspot of genetic exchange. We identified mechanisms that allow phage to counter SXT-mediated defense in clinical samples, and document the selection of a novel phage-encoded defense inhibitor. Phage infection stimulates high-frequency SXT ICE conjugation, leading to the concurrent dissemination of phage and antibiotic resistances