Metabolic Mitigation of Staphylococcus aureus Vancomycin Intermediate-Level Susceptibility.

Antimicrob Agents Chemother

School of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, Nebraska, USA

Published: January 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • A pathogenic bacteria is becoming harder to treat due to increased antibiotic resistance, especially to vancomycin, with a specific focus on vancomycin-intermediate (VISA) strains.
  • Research analyzed metabolic changes in a VISA strain compared to a vancomycin-sensitive strain to understand how these adaptations allow for growth despite antibiotic presence.
  • The study found that combining vancomycin with inhibitors targeting specific metabolic pathways could enhance treatment effectiveness against VISA strains, suggesting new strategies for combating these infections.

Article Abstract

is a major human pathogen whose infections are increasingly difficult to treat due to increased antibiotic resistance, including resistance to vancomycin. Vancomycin-intermediate (VISA) strains develop resistance to vancomycin through adaptive changes that are incompletely understood. Central to this adaptation are metabolic changes that permit growth in the presence of vancomycin. To define the metabolic changes associated with adaptive resistance to vancomycin in , the metabolomes of a vancomycin-sensitive and VISA strain pair isolated from the same patient shortly after vancomycin therapy began and following vancomycin treatment failure were analyzed. The metabolic adaptations included increases in acetogenesis, carbon flow through the pentose phosphate pathway, wall teichoic acid and peptidoglycan precursor biosynthesis, purine biosynthesis, and decreased tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle activity. The significance of these metabolic pathways for vancomycin-intermediate susceptibility was determined by assessing the synergistic potential of human-use-approved inhibitors of these pathways in combination with vancomycin against VISA strains. Importantly, inhibitors of amino sugar and purine biosynthesis acted synergistically with vancomycin to kill a diverse set of VISA strains, suggesting that combinatorial therapy could augment the efficacy of vancomycin even in patients infected with VISA strains.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5740343PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AAC.01608-17DOI Listing

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