4.8 Article

Glutamine promotes antibiotic uptake to kill multidrug-resistant uropathogenic bacteria

Journal

SCIENCE TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE
Volume 13, Issue 625, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.abj0716

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Nature Science Foundation of China [U1701235, 31822058, 31770045, 31772888]
  2. Science and Technology Plan Project of Guangzhou [201904020042]
  3. Open Project of State Key Laboratory of Biocontrol [2020SKLBC-KF07]
  4. Innovation Group Project of Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory (Zhuhai) [311020006]

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Exogenous glutamine can enhance the killing effect of antibiotics against multidrug-resistant bacteria, promote the influx of antibiotics, increase intracellular antibiotic concentrations, effectively prevent the development of antibiotic resistance, and provide new insights for the prevention or management of chronic, multidrug-resistant bacterial infections, bacterial persistence, and difficult-to-treat bacterial biofilms.
The prevalence of multidrug-resistant bacteria has been increasing rapidly worldwide, a trend that poses great risk to human and animal health and creates urgent need for pharmaceutical and nonpharmaceutical approaches to stop the spread of disease due to antimicrobial resistance. Here, we found that alanine, aspartate, and glutamate metabolism was inactivated, and glutamine was repressed in multidrug-resistant uropathogenic Escherichia coli using a comparative metabolomics approach. Exogenous glutamine promoted beta-lactam-, aminoglycoside-, quinolone-, and tetracycline-induced killing of uropathogenic E. coli and potentiated ampicillin to eliminate multidrug-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Acinetobacter baumannii, Klebsiella peneumoniae, Edwardsiella tarda, Vibrio alginolyticus, and Vibrio parahaemolyticus. Glutamine-potentiated ampicillin-mediated killing was effective against biofilms of these bacteria in a mouse urinary tract infection model and against systemic infection caused by E. coli, P. aeruginosa, A. baumannii, or K. peneumoniae in a mouse model. Exogenous glutamine stimulated influx of ampicillin, leading to the accumulation of intracellular antibiotic concentrations that exceeded the amount tolerated by the multidrug-resistant bacteria. Furthermore, we demonstrated that exogenous glutamine promoted the biosynthesis of nucleosides including inosine, which in turn interacted with CpxA/CpxR and up-regulated OmpF. We validated the physiological relevance of the mechanism by showing that loss of purF, purH, cpxA, or ompF elevated antibiotic resistance in antibiotic-sensitive strains. In addition, glutamine retarded the development of ampicillin resistance. These results may facilitate future development of effective approaches for preventing or managing chronic, multidrug-resistant bacterial infections, bacterial persistence, and difficult-to-treat bacterial biofilms.

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