AI Article Synopsis

  • Chronic infections often persist due to subpopulations of bacteria known as persister cells, which are metabolically inactive and more tolerant to antibiotics, highlighting a need for alternative treatment strategies.
  • Serine-threonine kinases and phosphatases in bacteria, like those in eukaryotes, play crucial roles in managing metabolism and stress responses, influencing how bacteria react to hostile environments.
  • Research shows that changes in phosphorylation patterns during stress, particularly through the kinase PknB, can affect bacterial growth and drug tolerance, suggesting that targeting these regulatory mechanisms could be a promising approach in treating stubborn bacterial infections.

Article Abstract

can cause infections that are often chronic and difficult to treat, even when the bacteria are not antibiotic resistant because most antibiotics act only on metabolically active cells. Subpopulations of persister cells are metabolically quiescent, a state associated with delayed growth, reduced protein synthesis, and increased tolerance to antibiotics. Serine-threonine kinases and phosphatases similar to those found in eukaryotes can fine-tune essential bacterial cellular processes, such as metabolism and stress signaling. We found that acid stress-mimicking conditions that experiences in host tissues delayed growth, globally altered the serine and threonine phosphoproteome, and increased threonine phosphorylation of the activation loop of the serine-threonine protein kinase B (PknB). The deletion of , which encodes the only annotated functional serine-threonine phosphatase in , increased the growth delay and phenotypic heterogeneity under different stress challenges, including growth in acidic conditions, the intracellular milieu of human cells, and abscesses in mice. This growth delay was associated with reduced protein translation and intracellular ATP concentrations and increased antibiotic tolerance. Using phosphopeptide enrichment and mass spectrometry-based proteomics, we identified targets of serine-threonine phosphorylation that may regulate bacterial growth and metabolism. Together, our findings highlight the importance of phosphoregulation in mediating bacterial quiescence and antibiotic tolerance and suggest that targeting PknB or Stp might offer a future therapeutic strategy to prevent persister formation during infections.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/scisignal.abj8194DOI Listing

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