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1.
The increasing number of penicillin-resistant clinical strains of Streptococcus pneumoniae has raised questions about the mechanism involved. We have isolated a large number of independent, spontaneous laboratory mutants with increasing resistance against either piperacillin or cefotaxime. Both classes of mutants showed a different pathway of penicillin-binding protein (PBP) alterations, and within each group of mutants the individual PBPs appeared to have changed at different resistance levels and in different sequences. The mutations led to decreased beta-lactam affinity and possibly to a reduction in the amount of protein present in the cell, but differences in apparent molecular weight, like those reported in low- and high-level resistant pathogenic strains, were not found. Some mutants showed a high degree of cross-resistance to a variety of penicillins and cephalosporins independently of the acquired PBP alterations, indicating that different genotypes can be responsible for the same phenotypic expression of resistance.  相似文献   

2.
A total of 12 non-epidemiologically related clinical isolates of Streptococcus mitis that showed different levels of resistance to penicillin were studied. Membrane-protein profiles and penicillin-binding protein (PBP) patterns showed a great polymorphism; and patterns of 4–7 PBPs, with sizes that ranged from ~101 kDa to ~40 kDa, were detected in each strain. No association could be found between PBP pattern and resistance level to penicillin among these isolates. Arbitrarily primed PCR confirmed the genetic diversity among this group of streptococci. One of the isolates of intermediate level of resistance to penicillin, which showed a PBP pattern similar to that of the high-resistance strains, was used as a laboratory model to analyse the mechanism underlying high-resistance acquisition by these strains. A 14-fold increase in penicillin resistance was obtained after a single selection step, which resulted in a decrease in penicillin affinity for PBP1. The size of this PBP (92 kDa) and the differences in PBP profiles of the penicillin-resistant clinical isolates suggest the existence in S. mitis of PBP-mediated mechanisms to acquire high-level resistance to penicillin, among which alterations in PBP1 seem to play a main role, in contrast to the PBP2X mediated mechanism described for other streptococci. Electronic Publication  相似文献   

3.
In Streptococcus pneumoniae, alterations in penicillin-binding protein 2b (PBP 2b) that reduce the affinity for penicillin binding are observed during development of beta-lactam resistance. The development of resistance was now studied in three independently obtained piperacillin-resistant laboratory mutants isolated after several selection steps on increasing concentrations of the antibiotic. The mutants differed from the clinical isolates in major aspects: first-level resistance could not be correlated with alterations in the known PBP genes, and the first PBP altered was PBP 2b. The point mutations occurring in the PBP 2b genes were characterized. Each mutant contained one single point mutation in the PBP 2b gene. In one mutant, this resulted in a mutation of Gly-617 to Ala within one of the homology boxes common to all PBPs, and in the other two cases, the same Gly-to-Asp substitution at the end of the penicillin-binding domain had occurred. The sites affected were homologous to those determined previously in the S. pneumoniae PBP 2x of mutants resistant to cefotaxime, indicating that, in both PBPs, similar sites are important for interaction with the respective beta-lactams.  相似文献   

4.
Mutants resistant to different antibiotics (streptomycin, tetracycline, ampicillin and penicillin) were obtained from several strains of Xanthomonas campestris and evaluated for xanthan production. Most of the mutants showed alterations in their polysaccharide production, either increasing, decreasing or totally losing their polymer-production capacity. The existence of two types of antibiotic-resistance mechanisms for the assayed drugs is suggested: one that affects xanthan production and another that does not. Differences in outer-membrane protein patterns of mutants that were simultaneously altered in antibiotic resistance and xanthan production were found, in comparison with their parental strains. These findings suggest the existence of a genetic relationship between antibiotic-resistance mechanisms and xanthan production. Some of the mutants obtained showed significant increases in broth viscosity and xanthan concentration. These results suggest that resistance to streptomycin and ampicillin can be used to obtain improved strains in plate screening assays. Received: 8 January 1997 / Received revision: 13 June 1997 / Accepted: 4 July 1997  相似文献   

5.
The penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs) of 209 cell division (or growth) temperature-sensitive mutants of Streptococcus faecium were analyzed in this study. A total of nine strains showed either constitutive or temperature-sensitive conditional damage in the PBPs. Analysis of these nine strains yielded the following results: one carried a PBP 1 constitutively showing a lower molecular weight; one constitutively lacked PBP 2; two lacked PBP 3 at 42 degrees C, but not at 30 degrees C; one was normal at 30 degrees C but at 42 degrees C lacked PBP 3 and overproduced PBP 5; two were normal at 42 degrees C and lacked PBP 5 at 30 degrees C; one constitutively lacked PBP 5; and one carried a PBP 6 constitutively split in two bands. The mutant lacking PBP 3 and overproducing PBP 5 continued to grow at 42 degrees C for 150 min and then lysed. Revertants selected for growth capability at 42 degrees C from the mutants altered in PBPs 5 and 6 maintained the same PBP alterations, while those isolated from the strains with altered PBP 1 or lacking PBP 2 or PBP 3 showed a normal PBP pattern. Penicillin-resistant derivatives were isolated at 30 degrees C from the mutants lacking PBP 2 and from that lacking PBP 3. All these derivatives continued to show the same PBP damage as the parents, but overproduced PBP 5 and grew at 42 degrees C. These findings indicate that high-molecular-weight, but not low-molecular-weight, PBPs are essential for cell growth in S. faecium. This is in complete agreement with previous findings obtained with a different experimental system. On the basis of both previous and present data it is suggested that PBPs 1, 2, and 3 appear necessary for cell growth at optimal temperature (and at maximal rate), but not for cell growth at a submaximal one (or at a reduced rate), and an overproduced PBP 5 is capable of taking over the function of PBPs 1, 2, and 3.  相似文献   

6.
The penicillin-binding protein (PBP) profiles of penicillin-susceptible and-resistant clinical isolates ofStreptococcus mitis varied even with strains with similar minimal inhibitory concentrations (MICs).S. mitis NCTC 10712 was used as a DNA recipient to investigate PBP alterations which could occur as a result of spontaneous mutation and intra- and interspecific transfer of penicillin resistance genes.S. mitis NCTC 10712 possesses seven major PBPs ranging in molecular mass from 49–82 kDa. TwoS. mitis and twoStreptococcus pneumoniae penicillin-resistant clinical isolates were used as donors in transformation experiments withS. mitis NCTC 10712 (MIC 0.03 g/ml) as the recipient. Transformants with MICs greater than 1 g/ml were obtained with bothS. mitis andS. pneumoniae donor DNA. Depending on the source of the donor DNA and level of resistance achieved, transformants showed reduced penicillin-binding affinities of PBPs 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6. The most consistent PBP alteration associated with increasing resistance inS. mitis NCTC 10712 was seen with PBP 3 (74 kDa).  相似文献   

7.
Penicillin resistance in Streptococcus pneumoniae has been attributed so far to the production of penicillin-binding protein (PBP) variants with decreased affinities for β-lactam antibiotics. Cefotaxime-resistant laboratory mutants, selected after several steps on increasing concentrations of this β-lactam, become deficient in transformation as well. A DNA fragment conferring both cefotaxime resistance and transformation deficiency was isolated and cloned from the mutant C306. The cefotaxime resistance associated with this resistance determinant was not accompanied with apparent changes in PBP properties, and it mapped on the chromosome distinct from the known resistance determinants, genes encoding PBP2x, PBP1a or PBP2b. Determination of a 2265 bp DNA sequence of the resistance determinant revealed two open reading frames, claR and claH, whose deduced amino acid sequence identified the corresponding proteins as the response regulator and histidine kinase receptor, respectively (members of the two families of bacterial signal-transducing proteins). Two hydrophobic peptide regions divided the histidine kinase ClaH into two putative domains: an N-terminal extracelluiar sensor part, and an intracelluiar C-terminal domain with the conserved His-226 residue, the presumed phosphorylation site. The single point mutations responsible for cefotaxime-resistance and transformation deficiency of C306 and of another two independently isolated cefotaxime-resistant mutants were each located in the C-terminal half of ClaH. A small extracellular protein, the competence factor, is required for induction of competence. Neither C306 nor the transformants obtained with the mutated claH gene produced competence factor, and exogenous competence factor could not complement the transformation deficiency, indicating that the signal-transducing system cia is involved in early steps of competence regulation.  相似文献   

8.
Development of penicillin resistance in Streptococcus pneumoniae is due to successive mutations in penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs) which reduce their affinity for beta-lactam antibiotics. PBP2x is one of the high-Mr PBPs which appears to be altered both in resistant clinical isolates, and in cefotaxime-resistant laboratory mutants. In this study, we have sequenced a 2564 base-pair chromosomal fragment from the penicillin-sensitive S. pneumoniae strain R6, which contains the PBP2x gene. Within this fragment, a 2250 base-pair open reading frame was found which coded for a protein having an Mr of 82.35kD, a value which is in good agreement with the Mr of 80-85 kD measured by SDS-gel electrophoresis of the PBP2x protein itself. The N-terminal region resembled an unprocessed signal peptide and was followed by a hydrophobic sequence that may be responsible for membrane attachment of PBP2x. The corresponding nucleotide sequence of the PBP2x gene from C504, a cefotaxime-resistant laboratory mutant obtained after five selection steps, contained three nucleotide substitutions, causing three amino acid alterations within the beta-lactam binding domain of the PBP2x protein. Alterations affecting similar regions of Escherichia coli PBP3 and Neisseria gonorrhoeae PBP2 from beta-lactam-resistant strains are known. The penicillin-binding domain of PBP2x shows highest homology with these two PBPs and S. pneumoniae PBP2b. In contrast, the N-terminal extension of PBP2x has the highest homology with E. coli PBP2 and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus PBP2'. No significant homology was detected with PBP1a or PBP1b of Escherichia coli, or with the low-Mr PBPs.  相似文献   

9.
Non-beta-lactamase-producing, penicillin-resistant strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae (CMRNG strains) produce altered forms of penicillin-binding protein 2 (PBP2) that have decreased affinity for penicillin. A feature of PBP2 from all CMRNG strains is the presence of an additional residue (Asp-345A) that is absent from PBP2 of penicillin-sensitive strains. The role of the additional aspartic acid residue in the decreased affinity of PBP2 is unclear as PBP2 of all previously examined CMRNG strains possess several other amino acid sequence alterations, in addition to the insertion of Asp-345A, compared to PBP2 of penicillin-sensitive strains. Site-directed mutagenesis has been used to insert the Asp-345A codon into the penA gene from a penicillin-sensitive gonococcus. The resulting penA gene expressed an altered form of PBP2 that had a decreased affinity for benzylpenicillin and was able to transform a penicillin-sensitive strain of N. gonorrhoeae to an increased level of resistance to benzylpenicillin. Insertion of amino acids other than aspartic acid did not produce forms of PBP2 that provided increased resistance to penicillin. Removal of the Asp-345A codon from the penA gene of a CMRNG strain reduced its ability to transform a penicillin-sensitive strain to an increased level of penicillin resistance. The reduction in the affinity of PBP2 in CMRNG strains is therefore largely, although not exclusively, due to the insertion of Asp-345A. Clinical isolates that produce altered forms of PBP2 that differ from that of penicillin-sensitive strains only in the insertion of Asp-345A have been identified.  相似文献   

10.
Previously, we constructed a set of mutants from which eight penicillin binding protein (PBP) genes were deleted in 192 combinations from Escherichia coli (S. A. Denome, P. K. Elf, T. A. Henderson, D. E. Nelson, and K. D. Young, J. Bacteriol. 181:3981-3993, 1999). Although these mutants were constructed correctly as determined by restriction mapping and the absence of relevant protein products, we recently discovered by PCR mapping that strains from which mrcA (PBP 1a) was deleted were also missing two neighboring genes of unknown function (yrfE and yrfF). We created a new deletion mutation in mrcA and reconstructed 63 strains lacking PBP 1a and other PBP mutant combinations. The new mrcA mutants do not exhibit mucoidy, phage resistance, temperature sensitivity, growth rate defects, or antibiotic resistance, suggesting that these phenotypes require the loss of either yrfE or yrfF alone or in combination with the absence of multiple PBPs.  相似文献   

11.
Penicillin-binding protein (PBP) 5 of Streptococcus faecium ATCC 9790 has an unusually low affinity for penicillin (50% binding occurred at a penicillin level of 8 micrograms/ml after 60 min of incubation, and the protein only became labeled after 20 min of incubation with high concentrations of radioactive penicillin). PBPs with similar properties are carried by strains of Streptococcus durans, Streptococcus faecalis, and Streptococcus lactis but not by strains of groups A, B, C, and G streptococci or Streptococcus pneumoniae. The strains carrying the slow-reacting PBP demonstrated a sensitivity to penicillin that was several hundred times lower than that of strains not carrying it. Spontaneous mutants with minimal inhibitory concentrations of penicillin of 20, 40, and 80 micrograms/ml were isolated from S. faecium ATCC 9790. They all showed a dramatic increase in the amount of slow-reacting PBP produced. Mutants with increased penicillin resistance were also isolated from wild-type strains of S. durans, S. faecalis, and S. faecium. All of them carried a greater amount of the slow-reacting PBP than that carried by the parent. Finally, it was found that resistant S. faecium ATCC 9790 mutants grew normally in the presence of penicillin concentrations that were far above that saturating all PBPs except PBP 5. Cell growth was, on the contrary, inhibited by a penicillin concentration that saturated the slow-reacting PBP by 90%. This penicillin dose was equal to the minimal inhibitory concentration.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Spontaneous and ethylmethane-sulfonate induced mutants of Escherichia coli resistant to gentamicin sulfate were isolated and investigated for alterations in the ribosomal protein pattern. It was found by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis that three independently isolated strains did not show any spot for ribosomal protein L6. On cochromatography of radioactively labelled mutant and wild-type ribosomal proteins on carboxymethyl-cellulose columns a shift of the elution position of protein L6 was observed, the new elution positions being characteristic for the individual mutants analyzed which indicates that they possess different alterations in the L6 primary structure.Genetic analysis showed that the gentamicin resistant strains contain at least two mutations. One of them correlates with the altered L6 protein and causes an increased minimal inhibitory concentration of the drug by about 5 to 10-fold. The other mutation is not yet biochemically characterized. Its presence is connected with an about 10 to 20-fold increase in the resistance. Both mutations, when put together, confer resistance to 50 to 100 g/ml of the antibiotic in a low salt rich medium and to 1 mg/ml in a defined medium with a high concentration of phosphate. Cross-resistance analysis demonstrated that the three gentamicin-resistant (double-mutant) strains with the altered L6 protein are resistant to 50–100 g per ml of all other aminoglycoside antibioties tested. This forms a sharp contrast to the streptomycin resistance mutations present in strA1, strA40 or strA60 mutants which do not confer markedly increased levels of resistance to most of the other aminoglycosides.  相似文献   

13.
Penicillin-binding protein 2x (PBP 2x) of Streptococcus pneumoniae is one of the high-molecular-weight PBPs involved in the development of intrinsic beta-lactam resistance. Point mutations in the PBP 2x genes (pbpX) have now been characterized in five independent spontaneous laboratory mutants in order to identify protein regions which are important for interaction with beta-lactam antibiotics. All mutant genes contained two to four mutations resulting in amino acid substitutions within the penicillin-binding domain of PBP 2x, and none of the mutants carried an identical set of mutations. For one particular mutant, C606, carrying four mutations in pbpX, the mutations at positions 601 and 597 conferred first- and second-level resistance when introduced into the susceptible parent strain S. pneumoniae R6. However, the other two mutations, at amino acid positions 289 and 422, which were originally selected at the fifth and sixth isolation steps, did not contribute at all to resistance in similar experiments. This suggests that they are phenotypically expressed only in combination with mutations in other genes. Three PBP 2x regions were mutated in from two to all four mutants carrying a low-affinity PBP 2x. However, in a fifth mutant containing a PBP 2x with apparent zero affinity for beta-lactams, the three mutations in pbpX mapped at entirely different positions. This demonstrates that different mutational pathways exist for remodeling this PBP during resistance development.  相似文献   

14.
Bacterial cell division involves the dynamic assembly of a diverse set of proteins that coordinate the invagination of the cell membrane and synthesis of cell wall material to create the new cell poles of the separated daughter cells. Penicillin‐binding protein PBP 2B is a key cell division protein in Bacillus subtilis proposed to have a specific catalytic role in septal wall synthesis. Unexpectedly, we find that a catalytically inactive mutant of PBP 2B supports cell division, but in this background the normally dispensable PBP 3 becomes essential. Phenotypic analysis of pbpC mutants (encoding PBP 3) shows that PBP 2B has a crucial structural role in assembly of the division complex, independent of catalysis, and that its biochemical activity in septum formation can be provided by PBP 3. Bioinformatic analysis revealed a close sequence relationship between PBP 3 and Staphylococcus aureus PBP 2A, which is responsible for methicillin resistance. These findings suggest that mechanisms for rescuing cell division when the biochemical activity of PBP 2B is perturbed evolved prior to the clinical use of β‐lactams.  相似文献   

15.
A collection of transposon-mutagenized strains of Yarrowia lipolytica was screened for wall defects by determination of their sensitivity to calcofluor white. A number of strains were hypersensitive, whereas others were resistant. Different non-allelic mutants displayed increased sensitivity to autolysis and lytic enzymes, independently of whether they were sensitive or resistant to calcofluor white. A thorough analysis of their cell walls revealed minor quantitative alterations, and no significant changes in chitin content. Electrophoretic analysis of wall-bound and excreted proteins proved to be a sensitive method that revealed defects in the cell wall structure of the mutants. Important alterations in the patterns of the wall proteins extracted by SDS or by enzymatic treatments were noticed for the mutants, as compared to the parental strain. Mutants released to the growth medium a larger number of protein species than the parental strain, suggesting impairment in wall assembly of certain polypeptides. Patterns of wall-bound and excreted proteins, as well as alterations in wall chemical composition were not diagnostic of calcofluor white sensitivity or resistance, but were specific for each mutant. Our data show that an increase in either sensitivity or resistance of Y. lipolytica to certain levels of calcofluor is equally indicative of alterations in cell wall structure, independent of chitin levels. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

16.
Listeria monocytogenes and other pathogenic bacteria modify their peptidoglycan to protect it against enzymatic attack through the host innate immune system, such as the cell wall hydrolase lysozyme. During our studies on GpsB, a late cell division protein that controls activity of the bi‐functional penicillin binding protein PBP A1, we discovered that GpsB influences lysozyme resistance of L. monocytogenes as mutant strains lacking gpsB showed an increased lysozyme resistance. Deletion of pbpA1 corrected this effect, demonstrating that PBP A1 is also involved in this. Susceptibility to lysozyme mainly depends on two peptidoglycan modifying enzymes: The peptidoglycan N‐deacetylase PgdA and the peptidoglycan O‐acetyltransferase OatA. Genetic and biochemical experiments consistently demonstrated that the increased lysozyme resistance of the ΔgpsB mutant was PgdA‐dependent and OatA‐independent. Protein‐protein interaction studies supported the idea that GpsB, PBP A1 and PgdA form a complex in L. monocytogenes and identified the regions in PBP A1 and PgdA required for complex formation. These results establish a physiological connection between GpsB, PBP A1 and the peptidoglycan modifying enzyme PgdA. To our knowledge, this is the first reported link between a GpsB‐like cell division protein and factors important for escape from the host immune system.  相似文献   

17.
Clinical isolates of Streptococcus pneumoniae that have greatly increased levels of resistance to penicillin (greater than 1000-fold) have been reported from South Africa during the last ten years. Penicillin resistance in these strains is entirely due to the development of penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs) with decreased affinity for penicillin. We have cloned and sequenced the coding region for the transpeptidase domain of penicillin-binding protein 2B from three penicillin-sensitive strains of S. pneumoniae and from a penicillin-resistant South African strain. The amino acid sequences of the transpeptidase domains of PBP2B of the three penicillin-sensitive strains were identical and there were only between one and four differences in the nucleotide sequences of their coding regions. The corresponding region of the PBP2B gene from the penicillin-resistant strain differed by 74 nucleotide substitutions which resulted in 17 alterations in the amino acid sequence of PBP2B. The most remarkable alteration that has occurred during the development of the 'penicillin-resistant' form of PBP2B is the substitution of seven consecutive residues in a region that is predicted to form a loop at the bottom of the penicillin-binding site.  相似文献   

18.
Vinella D  Cashel M  D'Ari R 《Genetics》2000,156(4):1483-1492
Rapidly growing Escherichia coli is unable to divide in the presence of the antibiotic mecillinam, whose direct target is penicillin-binding protein 2 (PBP2), responsible for the elongation of the cylindrical portion of the cell wall. Division can be restored in the absence of PBP2 activity by increasing the concentration of the cell division proteins FtsQ, FtsA, and FtsZ. We tried to identify regulators of the ftsQ-ftsA-ftsZ operon among mecillinam-resistant mutants, which include strains overexpressing these genes. By insertional mutagenesis with mini-Tn10 elements, we selected for insertions that conferred mecillinam resistance. Among 15 such mutants, 7 suppressed the thermosensitivity of the ftsZ84(Ts) mutant, strongly suggesting that they had increased FtsZ activity. In all 7 cases, however, the mutants resulted from a duplication of the ftsQAZ region. These duplications seemed to result from multiple events, suggesting that no simple insertional inactivation can result in a mutant with sufficiently amplified ftsQAZ expression to confer mecillinam resistance. The structure of the duplications suggests a general method for constructing directed duplications of precise sequences.  相似文献   

19.
Although general physiological functions have been ascribed to the high-molecular-weight penicillin binding proteins (PBPs) of Escherichia coli, the low-molecular-weight PBPs have no well-defined biological roles. When we examined the morphology of a set of E. coli mutants lacking multiple PBPs, we observed that strains expressing active PBP 5 produced cells of normal shape, while mutants lacking PBP 5 produced cells with altered diameters, contours, and topological features. These morphological effects were visible in untreated cells, but the defects were exacerbated in cells forced to filament by inactivation of PBP 3 or FtsZ. After filamentation, cellular diameter varied erratically along the length of individual filaments and many filaments exhibited extensive branching. Also, in general, the mean diameter of cells lacking PBP 5 was significantly increased compared to that of cells from isogenic strains expressing active PBP 5. Expression of cloned PBP 5 reversed the effects observed in DeltadacA mutants. Although deletion of PBP 5 was required for these phenotypes, the absence of additional PBPs magnified the effects. The greatest morphological alterations required that at least three PBPs in addition to PBP 5 be deleted from a single strain. In the extreme cases in which six or seven PBPs were deleted from a single mutant, cells and cell filaments expressing PBP 5 retained a normal morphology but cells and filaments lacking PBP 5 were aberrant. In no case did mutation of another PBP produce the same drastic morphological effects. We conclude that among the low-molecular-weight PBPs, PBP 5 plays a principle role in determining cell diameter, surface uniformity, and overall topology of the peptidoglycan sacculus.  相似文献   

20.
Penicillin-resistant strains of Streptococcus pneumoniae possess forms of penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs) that have a low affinity for penicillin compared to those from penicillin-sensitive strains. PBP genes from penicillin-resistant isolates are very variable and have a mosaic structure composed of blocks of nucleotides that are similar to those found in PBP genes from penicillin-sensitive isolates and blocks that differ by up to 21%. These chromosomally encoded mosaic genes have presumably arisen following transformation and homologous recombination with PBP genes from a number of closely related species. This study shows that PBP2B genes from many penicillin-resistant isolates of S. pneumoniae contain blocks of nucleotides originating from Streptococcus mitis. In several instances it would appear that this material alone is sufficient to produce a low affinity PBP2B. In other examples PBP2B genes possess blocks of nucleotides from S. mitis and at least one additional unidentified species. Mosaic structure was aiso found in the PBP2B genes of penicillin-sensitive isolates of S. mitis or S. pneumoniae. These mosaics did not confer penicillin resistance but nevertheless reveal something of the extent to which localized recombination occurs in these naturally transformable streptococci.  相似文献   

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