KAIST 생명과학과동창회
  • News & Events
  • News

News

Antibiotic tolerance study paves way for new treatments


A new study identifies a mechanism that makes bacteria tolerant to penicillin and related antibiotics, findings that could lead to new therapies that boost the effectiveness of these treatments.


Antibiotic tolerance is the ability of bacteria to survive exposure to antibiotics, in contrast to antibiotic resistance, when bacteria actually grow in the presence of antibiotics. Tolerant bacteria can lead to infections that persist after treatment and may develop into resistance over time.

The study in mice, “A Multifaceted Cellular Damage Repair and Prevention Pathway Promotes High Level Tolerance to Beta-lactam Antibiotics,” published Feb. 3 in the journal EMBO Reports, reveals how tolerance occurs, thanks to a system that mitigates iron toxicity in bacteria that have been exposed to penicillin.


“We’re hoping we can design a drug or develop antibiotic adjuvants that would then basically kill off these tolerant cells,” said senior author Tobias Dörr, assistant professor of microbiology in the Weill Institute for Cell and Molecular Biology in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.


Co-authors included Ilana Brito, the Mong Family Sesquicentennial Faculty Scholar and assistant professor in the Meinig School of Biomedical Engineering in the College of Engineering, and Lars Westblade, associate professor of pathology and laboratory medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine.


Some bacteria, including the model bacterium used in the study, Vibrio cholerae, which causes cholera in humans, are remarkably tolerant to penicillin and related antibiotics, known as beta lactam antibiotics. It has been known for a long time that beta-lactam antibiotics break down bacterial cell walls, but how bacteria survive loss of their cell walls was poorly understood.


In the study, the researchers developed a V. cholerae mutant that lacked a two-component damage repair response system that controls a gene network encoding diverse functions. Without the system, known as VxrAB, when the cell wall is damaged by antibiotics, the transfer of electrons across the cell membrane goes awry, leading to electrons ending up on the wrong molecules. This misdirection causes hydrogen peroxide to accumulate in the cell, which changes the oxidation state of cellular iron and disrupts signals for the cell to tell how much iron it has.   


In the presence of hydrogen peroxide, the mutant bacteria cannot sense how much iron has been acquired, and it behaves as if it is iron-starved and seeks to acquire more iron. Left unchecked, these circumstances cause iron toxicity, which will kill the cell, according to the experiments the researchers conducted. In further tests with mutant V. cholerae bacteria, both in test tubes and in mice, the researchers showed that reducing the influx of iron increased the bacteria’s tolerance to beta lactams.


Fortunately for normal V. cholerae, exposure to antibiotics and the breakdown of the cell’s walls activate the VxrAB system, which works to repair cell walls and downregulates iron uptake systems, and thereby creates antibiotic tolerance. More study is needed to understand what triggers the VxrAB system in the presence of beta-lactam antibiotics.


The research opens the door for developing new drugs that could be combined with antibiotics to exploit oxidative damage and iron influx in tolerant bacteria. In future work, the researchers will search for parallel mechanisms of tolerance in other bacterial pathogens.


Jung-Ho Shin, a postdoctoral researcher in Dörr’s lab, is the paper’s first author. Co-authors include researchers from the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, and the Intelligent Synthetic Biology Center in Korea.

The study was funded by the National Research Foundation of Korea and the National Institutes of Health.


https://news.cornell.edu/stories/2021/02/antibiotic-tolerance-study-paves-way-new-treatments

https://www.miragenews.com/antibiotic-tolerance-study-paves-way-for-new-516267/



List of Articles
번호 제목 글쓴이 날짜 조회 수
152 故 박태관 교수님의 명복을 빕니다. 과사무실 2011.04.11 13194
151 최준호 교수, <디아이학술상> 수상! 과사무실 2011.04.06 11973
150 최준호 교수 연구팀, 초파리 생체시계 유전자 'Twenty-four' 발견하여 Nature 발표 과사무실 2011.02.17 16652
149 2011년 개교 40주년 기념 우수교원 포상 과사무실 2011.02.11 10991
148 최길주 교수, PNAS에 논문 게재! 과사무실 2011.01.12 12605
147 박태관 교수, 2010년 '올해의 KAIST인 상' 수상! 과사무실 2010.12.28 12142
146 허원도 교수, 심장질환 원인신호 전달 메커니즘 규명 과사무실 2010.12.20 15377
145 도민재, 박재윤, 정현정 (박태관 교수 lab), 2010' 특허전략 유니버시아드 장려상 수상! 과사무실 2010.12.20 12150
144 김경란, 김민진, 김태형 (강창원 교수 lab) 2010’캠퍼스 특허전략 유니버시아드 대회 장려상 수상! 과사무실 2010.12.13 15115
143 강창원 교수, 2010년 국가연구개발 우수성과 100선에 선정 과사무실 2010.12.13 11454
142 한용만 교수(박상욱 박사과정), Blood 지에 논문 게재! 과사무실 2010.11.19 15117
141 강창원 교수, 2010년 기초연구 우수성과 선정! 과사무실 2010.11.08 11778
140 김학성 교수, 2010년 한국바이오칩학회 학술대상 수상! 과사무실 2010.11.01 11243
139 김미영 교수, KAIST 이원조교수로 선정! 과사무실 2010.10.25 18934
138 김고운 박사과정생(조경옥 교수 Lab), 2010년 한국분자세포생물학회 우수 포스터상 수상 과사무실 2010.10.15 15218
137 김미영 교수, 박서영 박사과정생(Prof. Walton Jones Lab), '청암과학펠로' 선정 과사무실 2010.10.11 19406
136 학사과정 김혜림, 국립암센터 인턴쉽 포스터발표 최우수상 수상 과사무실 2010.09.07 13557
135 조홍석 박사과정 학생, Traveling Award 및 Best Presentation Award 수상 과사무실 2010.07.16 11604
134 이균민 교수, 교무처장 인사 발령 과사무실 2010.07.15 11806
133 임대식 교수, 세포분열시 MST1 kinase의 새로운 암 억제 기능 발견 (2010. 3) 과사무실 2010.07.09 11592
Board Pagination Prev 1 ... 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 ... 22 Next
/ 22