Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Surrey, Guildford, GU2 7XH, UK.
Department of Quantitative Medicine, University of Zurich, Winterthurerstrasse 190, 8057, Zurich, Switzerland.
ISME J. 2021 May;15(5):1330-1343. doi: 10.1038/s41396-020-00853-2. Epub 2020 Dec 15.
The rapid emergence of antibiotic resistant bacterial pathogens constitutes a critical problem in healthcare and requires the development of novel treatments. Potential strategies include the exploitation of microbial social interactions based on public goods, which are produced at a fitness cost by cooperative microorganisms, but can be exploited by cheaters that do not produce these goods. Cheater invasion has been proposed as a 'Trojan horse' approach to infiltrate pathogen populations with strains deploying built-in weaknesses (e.g., sensitiveness to antibiotics). However, previous attempts have been often unsuccessful because population invasion by cheaters was prevented by various mechanisms including the presence of spatial structure (e.g., growth in biofilms), which limits the diffusion and exploitation of public goods. Here we followed an alternative approach and examined whether the manipulation of public good uptake and not its production could result in potential 'Trojan horses' suitable for population invasion. We focused on the siderophore pyoverdine produced by the human pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa MPAO1 and manipulated its uptake by deleting and/or overexpressing the pyoverdine primary (FpvA) and secondary (FpvB) receptors. We found that receptor synthesis feeds back on pyoverdine production and uptake rates, which led to strains with altered pyoverdine-associated costs and benefits. Moreover, we found that the receptor FpvB was advantageous under iron-limited conditions but revealed hidden costs in the presence of an antibiotic stressor (gentamicin). As a consequence, FpvB mutants became the fittest strain under gentamicin exposure, displacing the wildtype in liquid cultures, and in biofilms and during infections of the wax moth larvae Galleria mellonella, which both represent structured environments. Our findings reveal that an evolutionary trade-off associated with the costs and benefits of a versatile pyoverdine uptake strategy can be harnessed for devising a Trojan-horse candidate for medical interventions.
抗生素耐药细菌病原体的迅速出现是医疗保健中的一个关键问题,需要开发新的治疗方法。潜在的策略包括利用基于公共物品的微生物社会相互作用,这些公共物品是由合作微生物以适应度为代价产生的,但可以被不产生这些物品的骗子利用。骗子入侵被提议作为一种“特洛伊木马”策略,将具有内置弱点(例如对抗生素敏感)的菌株渗透到病原体种群中。然而,以前的尝试往往不成功,因为骗子种群的入侵被各种机制所阻止,包括空间结构的存在(例如,在生物膜中生长),这限制了公共物品的扩散和利用。在这里,我们采用了一种替代方法,研究了操纵公共物品的摄取而不是其产生是否会导致适合种群入侵的潜在“特洛伊木马”。我们专注于人类病原体铜绿假单胞菌 MPAO1 产生的铁载体吡咯并喹啉啉,并通过删除和/或过表达吡咯并喹啉啉的初级(FpvA)和次级(FpvB)受体来操纵其摄取。我们发现受体合成会反馈影响吡咯并喹啉啉的产生和摄取率,这导致菌株产生改变的吡咯并喹啉啉相关成本和收益。此外,我们发现受体 FpvB 在缺铁条件下有利,但在抗生素胁迫(庆大霉素)存在下揭示了隐藏的成本。因此,FpvB 突变体在庆大霉素暴露下成为最适应的菌株,在液体培养物中取代野生型,在蜡蛾幼虫家蚕的生物膜中和感染中也是如此,这两种情况都代表了结构化的环境。我们的研究结果表明,与多功能吡咯并喹啉啉摄取策略的成本和收益相关的进化权衡可以被利用来设计一种用于医疗干预的特洛伊木马候选物。