Species-specific activity of antibacterial drug combinations

Archive ouverte

Brochado, Ana Rita | Telzerow, Anja | Bobonis, Jacob | Banzhaf, Manuel | Mateus, André | Selkrig, Joel | Huth, Emily | Bassler, Stefan | Zamarreño Beas, Jordi | Zietek, Matylda | Ng, Natalie | Foerster, Sunniva | Ezraty, Benjamin | Py, Beatrice | Barras, Frédéric | Savitski, Mikhail | Bork, Peer | Göttig, Stephan | Typas, Athanasios

Edité par CCSD ; Nature Publishing Group -

International audience. The spread of antimicrobial resistance has become a serious public health concern, making once treatable diseases deadly again and undermining breakthrough achievements of modern medicine 1,2. Drug combinations can aid in fighting multi-drug resistant (MDR) bacterial infections, yet, are largely unexplored and rarely used in clinics. To identify general principles for antibacterial drug combinations and understand their potential, we profiled ~3,000 dose-resolved combinations of antibiotics, human-targeted drugs and food additives in 6 strains from three Gram-negative pathogens, Escherichia coli, Salmonella Typhimurium and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Despite their phylogenetic relatedness, more than 70% of the detected drug-drug interactions are species-specific and 20% display strain specificity, revealing a large potential for narrow-spectrum therapies. Overall, antagonisms are more common than synergies and occur almost exclusively between drugs targeting different cellular processes, whereas synergies are more conserved and enriched in drugs targeting the same process. We elucidate mechanisms underlying this dichotomy and further use our resource to dissect the interactions of the food additive, vanillin. Finally, we demonstrate that several synergies are effective against MDR clinical isolates in vitro and during Galleria mellonella infections with one reverting resistance to the last-resort antibiotic, colistin.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Fe-S Cluster Biosynthesis Controls Uptake of Aminoglycosides in a ROS-Less Death Pathway

Archive ouverte | Ezraty, Benjamin | CCSD

International audience. Unreactive Death A controversial proposal that all bactericidal antibiotics kill by reactive oxygen species (ROS) and not by their primary cell target has recently attracted high-profile refu...

Outer membrane lipoprotein NlpI scaffolds peptidoglycan hydrolases within multi‐enzyme complexes in Escherichia coli

Archive ouverte | Banzhaf, Manuel | CCSD

International audience. The peptidoglycan (PG) sacculus provides bacteria with the mechanical strength to maintain cell shape and resist osmotic stress. Enlargement of the mesh-like sacculus requires the combined ac...

A new antibiotic selectively kills Gram-negative pathogens

Archive ouverte | Imai, Yu | CCSD

International audience. The current need for novel antibiotics is especially acute for drug-resistant Gram-negative pathogens1,2. These microorganisms have a highly restrictive permeability barrier, which limits pen...

Chargement des enrichissements...