4.6 Article

Exposure of Pseudomonas aeruginosa to Cinnamaldehyde Selects Multidrug Resistant Mutants

Journal

ANTIBIOTICS-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics11121790

Keywords

Pseudomonas aeruginosa; essential oils; cinnamaldehyde; antibiotic resistance; efflux

Funding

  1. Region Bourgogne Franche-Comte
  2. French cystic fibrosis associations Vaincre la Mucoviscidose and Gregory Lemarchal [2018Y-04631]
  3. [RF20200502712]

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Research has found that Pseudomonas aeruginosa is able to adapt to the strong electrophilic molecule cinnamaldehyde (CNA) by upregulating its intrinsic efflux pump and through other pleiotropic changes, leading to increased resistance. Further evaluation is needed to assess whether multidrug-resistant mutants can emerge in patients using cinnamon essential oil as self-medication.
Cinnamaldehyde (CNA), the main component of cinnamon essential oil, is one of the most active plant compounds against nosocomial pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Exposure of wild-type strain PA14 (MIC 700 mu g/mL) for 5 to 10 days to fixed (900 mu g/mL) or increasing (from 900 to 1400 mu g/mL) concentrations of this natural antibacterial resulted in emergence of resistant mutants CNA-A1 to A3, and CNA-B1 to B7, respectively. Genome sequencing experiments showed that each of CNA-A1 to A3 mutants differed from PA14 by one SNP, and a slight increase in CNA resistance level (from 700 to 900 mu g/mL). By comparison, mutants B1 to B7 were more resistant (up to 1100 mu g/mL); each of them harbored multiple SNPs (from 24 to 39) likely as a consequence of alteration of DNA mismatch repair gene mutS. Of the ten mutants selected, eight contained mutations in gene nalC, which indirectly downregulates expression of the operon that codes for multidrug efflux system MexAB-OprM, and showed increased resistance (up to 16-fold versus PA14) to antibiotic molecules exported by the pump, including ss-lactams and fluoroquinolones. Of the six mutants with the highest CNA resistance, five were no longer motile because of alteration of genes flgJ, fliE and/or pilJ genes. Altogether, our data show that P. aeruginosa is able to adapt to strong electrophilic molecules such as CNA by upregulating its intrinsic efflux pump MexAB-OprM, and through less well-characterized pleiotropic changes. Whether multidrug-resistant mutants can emerge in patients using cinnamon essential oil as self-medication needs to be assessed further.

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