4.8 Article

Phosphorus stress induces the synthesis of novel glycolipids in Pseudomonas aeruginosa that confer protection against a last-resort antibiotic

Journal

ISME JOURNAL
Volume 15, Issue 11, Pages 3303-3314

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41396-021-01008-7

Keywords

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Funding

  1. MRC Doctoral Training Partnership studentship in Interdisciplinary Biomedical Research [MR/J003964/1]
  2. Royal Society International Exchanges 2017 Cost Share (China) award [170213, IEC\NSFC \170213]
  3. European Research Council (ERC) award under the European Union [726116]
  4. European Research Council (ERC) [726116] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Pseudomonas aeruginosa adapts to phosphorus-limited growth conditions by substituting membrane glycerophospholipids with sugar-containing glycolipids, leading to significant changes in antibiotic sensitivity. This adaptation highlights the link between environmental stress adaptation and antibiotic resistance in this bacterium.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a nosocomial pathogen with a prevalence in immunocompromised individuals and is particularly abundant in the lung microbiome of cystic fibrosis patients. A clinically important adaptation for bacterial pathogens during infection is their ability to survive and proliferate under phosphorus-limited growth conditions. Here, we demonstrate that P. aeruginosa adapts to P-limitation by substituting membrane glycerophospholipids with sugar-containing glycolipids through a lipid renovation pathway involving a phospholipase and two glycosyltransferases. Combining bacterial genetics and multi-omics (proteomics, lipidomics and metatranscriptomic analyses), we show that the surrogate glycolipids monoglucosyldiacylglycerol and glucuronic acid-diacylglycerol are synthesised through the action of a new phospholipase (PA3219) and two glycosyltransferases (PA3218 and PA0842). Comparative genomic analyses revealed that this pathway is strictly conserved in all P. aeruginosa strains isolated from a range of clinical and environmental settings and actively expressed in the metatranscriptome of cystic fibrosis patients. Importantly, this phospholipid-to-glycolipid transition comes with significant ecophysiological consequence in terms of antibiotic sensitivity. Mutants defective in glycolipid synthesis survive poorly when challenged with polymyxin B, a last-resort antibiotic for treating multi-drug resistant P. aeruginosa. Thus, we demonstrate an intriguing link between adaptation to environmental stress (nutrient availability) and antibiotic resistance, mediated through membrane lipid renovation that is an important new facet in our understanding of the ecophysiology of this bacterium in the lung microbiome of cystic fibrosis patients.

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