Escape mutations circumvent a tradeoff between resistance to a beta-lactam and resistance to a beta-lactamase inhibitor
Beta-lactamase inhibitors are increasingly used to counteract antibiotic resistance mediated by beta-lactamase enzymes. These inhibitors compete with the beta-lactam antibiotic for the same binding site on the beta-lactamase, thus generating an evolutionary tradeoff: mutations that increase the enzy...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature communications 2020-04, Vol.11 (1), p.2029-9, Article 2029 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Beta-lactamase inhibitors are increasingly used to counteract antibiotic resistance mediated by beta-lactamase enzymes. These inhibitors compete with the beta-lactam antibiotic for the same binding site on the beta-lactamase, thus generating an evolutionary tradeoff: mutations that increase the enzyme’s beta-lactamase activity tend to increase also its susceptibility to the inhibitor. Here, we investigate how common and accessible are mutants that escape this adaptive tradeoff. Screening a deep mutant library of the
bla
ampC
beta-lactamase gene of
Escherichia coli
, we identified mutations that allow growth at beta-lactam concentrations far exceeding those inhibiting growth of the wildtype strain, even in the presence of the enzyme inhibitor (avibactam). These escape mutations are rare and drug-specific, and some combinations of avibactam with beta-lactam drugs appear to prevent such escape phenotypes. Our results, showing differential adaptive potential of
bla
ampC
to combinations of avibactam and different beta-lactam antibiotics, suggest that it may be possible to identify treatments that are more resilient to evolution of resistance.
Beta-lactam antibiotics and beta-lactamase inhibitors compete for the same binding site on beta-lactamases; thus, mutations that increase beta-lactamase activity likely increase also susceptibility to the inhibitor. Here, Russ et al. identify rare mutations in the
ampC
beta-lactamase gene that escape this adaptive tradeoff specifically for certain drug combinations. |
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ISSN: | 2041-1723 2041-1723 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41467-020-15666-2 |