Antibiotic resistance is an increasing threat to human health. A direct link has been established between antimicrobial self-resistance determinants of antibiotic producers, environmental bacteria, and clinical pathogens. Natural odilorhabdins (ODLs) constitute a new family of 10-mer linear cationic peptide antibiotics inhibiting bacterial translation by binding to the 30S subunit of the ribosome. These bioactive secondary metabolites are produced by entomopathogenic bacterial symbiont (), vectored by the soil-dwelling nematodes. ODL-producing Xenorhabdus nematophila symbionts have mechanisms of self-protection. In this study, we cloned the 44.5-kb biosynthetic gene cluster (-BGC) of the symbiont by recombineering and showed that the -acetyltransferase-encoding gene, , is responsible for ODL resistance. acetylation and liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) analyses showed that OatA targeted the side chain amino group of ODL rare amino acids, leading to a loss of translation inhibition and antibacterial properties. Functional, genomic, and phylogenetic analyses of revealed an exclusive -link to the odilorhabdin BGC, found only in and a specific phylogenetic clade of . This work highlights the coevolution of antibiotic production and self-resistance as ancient features of this unique tripartite complex of host-vector-symbiont interactions without -BGC dissemination by lateral gene transfer. Odilorhabdins (ODLs) constitute a novel antibiotic family with promising properties for treating problematic multidrug-resistant Gram-negative bacterial infections. ODLs are 10-mer linear cationic peptides inhibiting bacterial translation by binding to the small subunit of the ribosome. These natural peptides are produced by Xenorhabdus nematophila, a bacterial symbiont of entomopathogenic nematodes well known to produce large amounts of specialized secondary metabolites. Like other antimicrobial producers, ODL-producing Xenorhabdus nematophila has mechanisms of self-protection. In this study, we cloned the ODL-biosynthetic gene cluster of the symbiont by recombineering and showed that the -acetyltransferase-encoding gene, , is responsible for ODL resistance. acetylation and LC-MS/MS analyses showed that OatA targeted the side chain amino group of ODL rare amino acids, leading to a loss of translation inhibition and antibacterial properties. Functional, genomic, and phylogenetic analyses of revealed the coevolution of antibiotic production and self-resistance as ancient feature of this particular niche in soil invertebrates without resistance dissemination.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8749412PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.02826-21DOI Listing

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