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Antibiotic resistance evolved via inactivation of a ribosomal RNA methylating enzyme
Authors:Vanja Stojkovi?  Lianet Noda-Garcia  Dan S Tawfik  Danica Galoni? Fujimori
Institution:1Department of Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94158, USA;2Department of Biomolecular Sciences, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel;3Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University of California San Francisco, 600 16th St, MC2280 San Francisco, CA 94158, USA
Abstract:Modifications of the bacterial ribosome regulate the function of the ribosome and modulate its susceptibility to antibiotics. By modifying a highly conserved adenosine A2503 in 23S rRNA, methylating enzyme Cfr confers resistance to a range of ribosome-targeting antibiotics. The same adenosine is also methylated by RlmN, an enzyme widely distributed among bacteria. While RlmN modifies C2, Cfr modifies the C8 position of A2503. Shared nucleotide substrate and phylogenetic relationship between RlmN and Cfr prompted us to investigate evolutionary origin of antibiotic resistance in this enzyme family. Using directed evolution of RlmN under antibiotic selection, we obtained RlmN variants that mediate low-level resistance. Surprisingly, these variants confer resistance not through the Cfr-like C8 methylation, but via inhibition of the endogenous RlmN C2 methylation of A2503. Detection of RlmN inactivating mutations in clinical resistance isolates suggests that the mechanism used by the in vitro evolved variants is also relevant in a clinical setting. Additionally, as indicated by a phylogenetic analysis, it appears that Cfr did not diverge from the RlmN family but from another distinct family of predicted radical SAM methylating enzymes whose function remains unknown.
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