Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

Proteolytic Queues at ClpXP Increase Antibiotic Tolerance

Heather S. Deter, Alawiah H. Abualrahi,Prajakta Jadhav, Elise K. Schweer,Curtis T. Ogle,Nicholas C. Butzin

ACS SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY(2020)

Cited 11|Views7
No score
Abstract
Antibiotic tolerance is a widespread phenomenon that renders antibiotic treatments less effective and facilitates antibiotic resistance. Here we explore the role of proteases in antibiotic tolerance, short-term population survival of antibiotics, using queueing theory (i.e., the study of waiting lines), computational models, and a synthetic biology approach. Proteases are key cellular components that degrade proteins and play an important role in a multidrug tolerant subpopulation of cells, called persisters. We found that queueing at the protease ClpXP increases antibiotic tolerance, similar to 80 and similar to 60 fold in an E. coli population treated with ampicillin and ciprofloxacin, respectively. There does not appear to be an effect on antibiotic persistence, which we distinguish from tolerance based on population decay. These results demonstrate that proteolytic queueing is a practical method to probe proteolytic activity in bacterial tolerance and related genes, while limiting the unintended consequences frequently caused by gene knockout and overexpression.
More
Translated text
Key words
antibiotic tolerance,persistence,antibiotic resistance,queueing,protease,synthetic biology,ClpXP
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined