TY - JOUR
T1 - HflXr, a homolog of a ribosome-splitting factor, mediates antibiotic resistance
AU - Duval, Melodie
AU - Dar, Daniel
AU - Carvalho, Filipe
AU - Rocha, Eduardo P. C.
AU - Sorek, Rotem
AU - Cossart, Pascale
N1 - We thank Stefano Marzi and Pascale Romby for advice; Claire Poyart, Grégory Boël, and Olivier Dussurget for useful discussions; Nora Vazquez-Laslop for critical input into the article; Hugo Varet from the C3BI-Hub (Institut Pasteur) for his valuable help on data analysis and statistics; Laurence Maranghi, Julienne Blondou, and Youssouf Boina for essential technical support; and our referees for their comments, which have significantly increased the quality of this work. This work was supported, in part, by grants (to P.C.) [European Research Council (ERC) Advanced Grant BacCellEpi (670823), Agence Nationale de la Recherche Investissement d’Avenir Programme (10-LABX-62-IBEID), the Fondation le Roch les Mousquetaires]; and, in part, by grants (to R.S.) [Israel Science Foundation personal Grant (1360/16) and I-CORE Grant (1796/12), ERC Grant (ERC-CoG 681203), the German Research Council priority program SPP 2002 (Grant SO 1611/1-1), and the Pasteur–Weizmann council]. P.C. is a Senior International Research Scholar of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
PY - 2018/12/13
Y1 - 2018/12/13
N2 - To overcome the action of antibiotics, bacteria have evolved a variety of different strategies, such as drug modification, target mutation, and efflux pumps. Recently, we performed a genome-wide analysis of Listeria monocytogenes gene expression after growth in the presence of antibiotics, identifying genes that are up-regulated upon antibiotic treatment. One of them, lmo0762, is a homologof hflX, which encodes a heat shock protein that rescues stalled ribosomes by separating their two subunits. To our knowledge, ribosome splitting has never been described as an antibiotic resistance mechanism. We thus investigated the role of lmo0762 in antibiotic resistance. First, we demonstrated that lmo0762 is an antibiotic resistance gene that confers protection against lincomycin and erythromycin, and that we renamed hflXr (hflX resistance). We show that hflXr expression is regulated by a transcription attenuation mechanism relying on the presence of alternative RNA structures and a small ORF encoding a 14 amino acid peptide containing the RLR motif, characteristic of macrolide resistance genes. We also provide evidence that HflXr is involved in ribosome recycling in presence of antibiotics. Interestingly, L. monocytogenes possesses another copy of hflX, lmo1296, that is not involved in antibiotic resistance. Phylogenetic analysis shows several events of hflXr duplication in prokaryotes and widespread presence of hflXr in Firmicutes. Overall, this study reveals the Listeria hflXr as the founding member of a family of antibiotic resistance genes. The resistance conferred by this gene is probably of importance in the environment and within microbial communities.
AB - To overcome the action of antibiotics, bacteria have evolved a variety of different strategies, such as drug modification, target mutation, and efflux pumps. Recently, we performed a genome-wide analysis of Listeria monocytogenes gene expression after growth in the presence of antibiotics, identifying genes that are up-regulated upon antibiotic treatment. One of them, lmo0762, is a homologof hflX, which encodes a heat shock protein that rescues stalled ribosomes by separating their two subunits. To our knowledge, ribosome splitting has never been described as an antibiotic resistance mechanism. We thus investigated the role of lmo0762 in antibiotic resistance. First, we demonstrated that lmo0762 is an antibiotic resistance gene that confers protection against lincomycin and erythromycin, and that we renamed hflXr (hflX resistance). We show that hflXr expression is regulated by a transcription attenuation mechanism relying on the presence of alternative RNA structures and a small ORF encoding a 14 amino acid peptide containing the RLR motif, characteristic of macrolide resistance genes. We also provide evidence that HflXr is involved in ribosome recycling in presence of antibiotics. Interestingly, L. monocytogenes possesses another copy of hflX, lmo1296, that is not involved in antibiotic resistance. Phylogenetic analysis shows several events of hflXr duplication in prokaryotes and widespread presence of hflXr in Firmicutes. Overall, this study reveals the Listeria hflXr as the founding member of a family of antibiotic resistance genes. The resistance conferred by this gene is probably of importance in the environment and within microbial communities.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85059214021&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1073/pnas.1810555115
DO - 10.1073/pnas.1810555115
M3 - مقالة
C2 - 30545912
SN - 0027-8424
VL - 115
SP - 13359
EP - 13364
JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
IS - 52
ER -