AI Article Synopsis

  • Research on the antibiotic fosfomycin reveals it can penetrate biofilms effectively, renewing interest in its use against bacterial infections.
  • Analysis of a clinical Staphylococcus aureus strain showed that fosfomycin causes changes in gene expression, particularly downregulating genes related to nutrient transport and metabolism, while some regulatory genes were upregulated.
  • Fosfomycin-treated biofilm cells demonstrated reduced metabolism and cell wall turnover, allowing them to persist in biofilms and promote a hyperadhesive phenotype among nearby cells under antibiotic stress.

Article Abstract

Interest has been rekindled in the old antibiotic fosfomycin, partly because of its ability to penetrate biofilm. Using a transcriptomic approach, we investigated the modifications induced by fosfomycin in sessile cells of a clinical Staphylococcus aureus isolated from a device-associated infection. Cells still able to form biofilm after 4 h of incubation in the presence of subinhibitory concentrations of fosfomycin and cells from 24-h-old biofilm later submitted to fosfomycin had 6.77% and 9.41%, respectively, of differentially expressed genes compared with their antibiotic-free control. Fosfomycin induced mostly downregulation of genes assigned to nucleotide, amino acid and carbohydrate transport, and metabolism. Adhesins and capsular biosynthesis proteins encoding genes were downregulated in fosfomycin-grown biofilm, whereas the murein hydrolase regulator lgrA and a D-lactate dehydrogenase-encoding gene were upregulated. In fosfomycin-treated biofilm, the expression of genes encoding adhesins, the cell wall biosynthesis protein ScdA, and to a lesser extent the fosfomycin target MurA was also decreased. Unattached cells surrounding fosfomycin-grown biofilm showed greater ability to form aggregates than their counterparts obtained without fosfomycin. Reducing their global metabolism and lowering cell wall turnover would allow some S. aureus cells to grow in biofilm despite fosfomycin stress while promoting hyperadherent phenotype in the vicinity of the fosfomycin-treated biofilm.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41429-019-0256-yDOI Listing

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