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Understanding and Sensitizing Density-Dependent Persistence to Quinolone Antibiotics.

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Physiologic and environmental factors can modulate antibiotic activity and thus pose a significant challenge to antibiotic treatment. The quinolone class of antibiotics, which targets bacterial topoisomerases, fails to kill bacteria… Click to show full abstract

Physiologic and environmental factors can modulate antibiotic activity and thus pose a significant challenge to antibiotic treatment. The quinolone class of antibiotics, which targets bacterial topoisomerases, fails to kill bacteria that have grown to high density; however, the mechanistic basis for this persistence is unclear. Here, we show that exhaustion of the metabolic inputs that couple carbon catabolism to oxidative phosphorylation is a primary cause of growth phase-dependent persistence to quinolone antibiotics. Supplementation of stationary-phase cultures with glucose and a suitable terminal electron acceptor to stimulate respiratory metabolism is sufficient to sensitize cells to quinolone killing. Using this approach, we successfully sensitize high-density populations of Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, and Mycobacterium smegmatis to quinolone antibiotics. Our findings link growth-dependent quinolone persistence to discrete impairments in respiratory metabolism and identify a strategy to kill non-dividing bacteria.

Keywords: persistence quinolone; density; quinolone antibiotics; persistence; quinolone; dependent persistence

Journal Title: Molecular cell
Year Published: 2017

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