4.3 Article

ATP/ADP alteration as a sign of the oxidative stress development in Escherichia coli cells under antibiotic treatment

Journal

FEMS MICROBIOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 353, Issue 1, Pages 69-76

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/1574-6968.12405

Keywords

adenyl nucleotides; antibiotic susceptibility; oxygen consumption; reactive oxygen species; sub-lethal stress

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Funding

  1. 'Molecular and cellular biology' RAS Presidium Program [12-P-4-1047]
  2. Russian Foundation for Basic Research [11-04-96001, 13-04-96002]
  3. Ural branch of RAS [14-4-IP-29]

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The extensively discussed idea of oxidative stress development under antibiotic treatment was confirmed using an antioxidant gene expression (soxRS-, oxyR-regulon) approach, including microaerobic cultivation conditions. The killing action of antibiotics and their ability to cause peroxide oxidative stress in Escherichia coli cells was comparable to a similar hydrogen peroxide capacity; therefore, the involvement of intracellular hydrogen peroxide production in the killing action of antibiotics seems plausible under conditions studied. The temporary increase of ATP/ADP (which returned to untreated levels in 10min) and the intensification of respiration preceded the development of oxidative stress. The sharp rise in ATP/ADP was due to the accumulation of ATP with a slight increase in the ADP content. We proposed that ATP accumulation was not a result of increased respiration but was due to the inhibition of energy-consuming processes. The association of reactive oxygen species formation under antibiotic treatment with the inhibition of direct electron flow pathway along the respiratory chain, and a possible role of a sharp rise in ATP/ADP in this process is hypothesized.

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