4.7 Article

Non-walled spherical Acinetobacter baumannii is an important type of persister upon β-lactam antibiotic treatment

Journal

EMERGING MICROBES & INFECTIONS
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages 1149-1159

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/22221751.2020.1770630

Keywords

Acinetobacter baumannii; persisters; drug tolerance; non-walled spherical bacterium; beta-lactam antibiotics

Funding

  1. University of Macau [MYRG2016-00073-FHS, MYRG2016-00199-FHS, MYRG2019-000050-FHS]
  2. Science and Technology Development Fund, Macau SAR [0058/2018/A2, 0113/2019/A2]

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Bacterial persistence is one of the major causes of antibiotic treatment failure and the step stone for antibiotic resistance. However, the mechanism by which persisters arise has not been well understood. Maintaining a dormant state to prevent antibiotics from taking effect is believed to be the fundamental mechanistic basis, and persisters normally maintain an intact cellular structure. Here we examined the morphologies of persisters in Acinetobacter baumannii survived from the treatment by three major classes of antibiotics (i.e. beta-lactam, aminoglycoside, and fluoroquinolone) with microcopy and found that a fraction of enlarged spherical bacteria constitutes a major sub-population of bacterial survivors from beta-lactam antibiotic treatment, whereas survivors from the treatment of aminoglycoside and fluoroquinolone were less changed morphologically. Further studies showed that these spherical bacteria had completely lost their cell wall structures but could survive without any osmoprotective reagent. The spherical bacteria were not the viable-but-nonculturable cells and they could revive upon the removal of beta-lactam antibiotics. Importantly, these non-walled spherical bacteria also persisted during antibiotic therapy in vivo using Galleria mellonella as the infection model. Additionally, the combinational treatment on A. baumannii by beta-lactam and membrane-targeting antibiotic significantly enhanced the killing efficacy. Our results indicate that in addition to the dormant, structure intact persisters, the non-wall spherical bacterium is another important type of persister in A. baumannii. The finding suggests that targeting the bacterial cell membrane during beta-lactam chemotherapy could enhance therapeutic efficacy on A. baumannii infection, which might also help to reduce the resistance development of A. baumannii.

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