Infectious diseases kill more people worldwide than any other single
cause, but treatment often fails because a small fraction of bacterial
cells can transiently survive antibiotics and recolonize the body. A
study reveals that these so-called persisters form in response to
adverse conditions through the action of a molecule called Obg, which
plays an important role in all major cellular processes in multiple
bacterial species.
"Persisters pose a fundamental hurdle to the treatment of chronic and
biofilm infections by bacterial and fungal pathogens," says co-senior
study author Jan Michiels of KU Leuven -- University of Leuven. "Our
findings suggest that combining antibiotic treatment with a therapy
specifically targeting the novel persistence pathway we discovered would
prove advantageous by enhancing patient responses to antibiotic
treatment and by shortening antibiotic therapy duration."
Persistence is triggered in part by bacterial toxins that shut down
critical cellular processes, such as protein synthesis or energy
production, forcing the bacterial cells to enter a dormant state in
which they are no longer susceptible to killing by antibiotics. But the
mechanisms underlying toxin-mediated persistence have not been clear,
and little is known about how environmental signals trigger bacterial
persistence.
To answer these questions, Michiels and his team focused on the
potential role of Obg because this enzyme is at the nexus of major
cellular processes, such as protein and DNA synthesis, and it triggers
dormancy when cellular energy levels are low. They found that high
levels of Obg protected nutrient-starved intestinal bacteria called
Escherichia coli and the pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa from two
antibiotics that interfere with DNA and protein synthesis. "This
indicates that a common mechanism to produce persisters is active in
different bacterial species," Michiels says. "Therefore, Obg could be a
target for the development of novel therapeutics against infectious
diseases."
Obg induced persistence in E. coli by increasing levels of a toxic
molecule called HokB, which causes small holes to form in the bacterial
membrane, thereby halting energy production and triggering dormancy.
However, deletion of hokB did not decrease persistence in E. coli, and
this gene was absent in P. aeruginosa, suggesting that persistence is
controlled by at least one other Obg-regulated pathway waiting to be
discovered. Another question for future research is how persistent cells
can recover from toxin-induced damage and switch back to the normal,
non-persistent state. "Answering these fundamental questions will pave
the way for translational research that could ultimately lead to better
therapies to combat bacterial infections."
This story is taken from Science Daily
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