RT Journal Article
SR Electronic
T1 Global reprogramming of virulence and antibiotic resistance in Pseudomonas aeruginosa by a single nucleotide polymorphism in the elongation factor-encoding gene, fusA1
JF bioRxiv
FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
SP 842781
DO 10.1101/842781
A1 Maunders, Eve A.
A1 Triniman, Rory C.
A1 Rahman, Taufiq
A1 Welch, Martin
YR 2019
UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/11/15/842781.abstract
AB Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a common opportunistic pathogen. The organism displays elevated intrinsic antibiotic resistance and can cause life-threatening infections. The gene encoding an elongation factor, FusA1, is frequently mutated in clinical isolates of P. aeruginosa from patients with cystic fibrosis (CF). Recent work has shown that fusA1 mutants often display elevated aminoglycoside resistance due to increased expression of the aminoglycoside efflux pump, MexXY. In the current work, we isolated a spontaneous gentamicin-resistant fusA1 mutant (FusA1P443L) in which mexXY expression was increased. Through a combination of proteomic and transcriptomic analyses, we found that the fusA1 mutant also exhibited large-scale but discrete changes in the expression of key pathogenicity-associated genes. Most notably, the fusA1 mutant displayed greatly increased expression of the Type III Secretion system (T3SS), widely considered to be the most potent virulence factor in the P. aeruginosa arsenal, and also elevated expression of the Type VI Secretion (T6S) machinery. This was unexpected because expression of the T3SS is usually reciprocally coordinated with T6S system expression. The fusA1 mutant also displayed elevated exopolysaccharide production, dysregulated siderophore production, elevated ribosomal protein synthesis, and transcriptomic signatures indicative of translational stress. Each of these phenotypes (and almost all of the transcriptomic and proteomic changes associated with the fusA1 mutation) were restored to levels comparable to that in the PAO1-derived progenitor strain by expression of the wild-type fusA1 gene in trans, indicating that the mutant gene is recessive. Our data show that in addition to elevating antibiotic resistance through mexXY expression (although we also identify additional contributory resistance mechanisms), mutations in fusA1 can lead to highly-selective dysregulation of virulence gene expression.