4.6 Article

Repressed Central Carbon Metabolism and Its Effect on Related Metabolic Pathways in Cefoperazone/Sulbactam-Resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2022.847634

Keywords

Pseudomonas aeruginosa; antibiotic resistance; central carbon metabolism; cefoperazone; sulbactam; fatty acid metabolism; glutamate metabolism; riboflavin

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The study found that the central carbon metabolism is repressed in SCF-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa, along with a decrease in related riboflavin metabolism and other metabolic pathways such as fatty acid biosynthesis and glutamate metabolism. The reduced riboflavin metabolism is linked to ROS generation, contributing to SCF resistance, but increasing ROS levels can restore SCF sensitivity.
Metabolic shift and antibiotic resistance have been reported in Pseudomonas aeruginosa. However, the global metabolic characteristics remain largely unknown. The present study characterizes the central carbon metabolism and its effect on other metabolic pathways in cefoperazone-sulbactam (SCF)-resistant P. aeruginosa (PA-R-SCF). GC-MS-based metabolomics shows a repressed central carbon metabolism in PA-R-SCF, which is confirmed by measuring expression of genes and activity of enzymes in the metabolism. Furthermore, expression of the genes that encode the enzymes for the first step of fatty acid biosynthesis, glutamate metabolism, and electron transport chain is reduced, confirmed by their enzymatic activity assay, and the key enzyme for riboflavin metabolism is also reduced, indicating the decreased metabolic flux to the four related metabolic pathways. Moreover, the role of the reduced riboflavin metabolism, being related to ROS generation, in SCF resistance is explored. Exogenous H2O2 potentiates SCF-mediated killing in a dose-dependent manner, suggesting that the decreased ROS resulted from the reduced riboflavin metabolism that contributed to the resistance. These results indicate that the repressed central carbon metabolism and related riboflavin metabolism contribute to SCF resistance, but increasing ROS can restore SCF sensitivity. These findings characterize the repressed central carbon metabolism and its effect on other metabolic pathways as the global metabolic features in PA-R-SCF.

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