4.6 Article

Aminoglycosides Antagonize Bacteriophage Proliferation, Attenuating Phage Suppression of Bacterial Growth, Biofilm Formation, and Antibiotic Resistance

Journal

APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 87, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/AEM.00468-21

Keywords

phage therapy; biofilms; phage-antibiotic combinations; antibiotic resistance; antagonism

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation through the Engineering Research Center (ERC) for Nanotechnology-Enabled Water Treatment (NEWT) [EEC-1449500]

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This study reveals that aminoglycoside antibiotics inhibit the replication of phages and reduce their impact on bacterial growth, biofilm formation, and antibiotic tolerance. It highlights the overlooked antagonistic effect on phage proliferation and its implications for bacterial control and antibiotic resistance propagation.
The common cooccurrence of antibiotics and phages in both natural and engineered environments underscores the need to understand their interactions and implications for bacterial control and antibiotic resistance propagation. Here, aminoglycoside antibiotics that inhibit protein synthesis (e.g., kanamycin and neomycin) impeded the replication of coliphage T3 and Bacillus phage BSP, reducing their infection efficiency and mitigating their hindrance of bacterial growth, biofilm formation, and tolerance to antibiotics. For example, treatment with phage T3 reduced subsequent biofilm formation by Escherichia coli liquid cultures to 53% +/- 65% of that of the no-phage control, but a smaller reduction of biofilm formation (89% +/- 610%) was observed for combined exposure to phage T3 and kanamycin. Despite sharing a similar mode of action with aminoglycosides (i.e., inhibiting protein synthesis) and antagonizing phage replication, albeit to a lesser degree, tetracyclines did not inhibit bacterial control by phages. Phage T3 combined with tetracycline showed higher suppression of biofilm formation than when combined with aminoglycosides (25% +/- 66% of the no-phage control). The addition of phage T3 to E. coli suspensions with tetracycline also suppressed the development of tolerance to tetracycline. However, this suppression of antibiotic tolerance development disappeared when tetracycline was replaced with 3 mg/liter kanamycin, corroborating the greater antagonism with aminoglycosides. Overall, this study highlights this overlooked antagonistic effect on phage proliferation, which may attenuate phage suppression of bacterial growth, biofilm formation, antibiotic tolerance, and maintenance of antibiotic resistance genes. IMPORTANCE The coexistence of residual antibiotics and phages is common in many environments, which underscores the need to understand their interactive effects on bacteria and the implications for antibiotic resistance propagation. Here, aminoglycosides acting as bacterial protein synthesis inhibitors impeded the replication of various phages. This alleviated the suppressive effects of phages against bacterial growth and biofilm formation and diminished bacterial fitness costs that suppress the emergence of tolerance to antibiotics. We show that changes in bacteria caused by environmentally relevant concentrations of sublethal antibiotics can affect phage-host dynamics that are commonly overlooked in vitro but can result in unexpected environmental consequences.

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