Artículos de revistas
Nutrient scarcity in a new defined medium reveals metabolic resistance to antibiotics in the fish pathogen piscirickettsia salmonis
Fecha
2021Registro en:
Frontiers in Microbiology October 2021 Volume 12 Article Number 734239
10.3389/fmicb.2021.734239
Autor
Ortiz Severín, Javiera Rocío
Stuardo, Camila J.
Jiménez, Natalia E.
Palma Viganego, Ricardo
Cortés, María P.
Maldonado, Jonathan
Maass Sepúlveda, Alejandro Eduardo
Cambiazo Ayala, Liliana Verónica
Institución
Resumen
Extensive use of antibiotics has been the primary treatment for the Salmonid Rickettsial
Septicemia, a salmonid disease caused by the bacterium Piscirickettsia salmonis.
Occurrence of antibiotic resistance has been explored in various P. salmonis isolates
using different assays; however, P. salmonis is a nutritionally demanding intracellular
facultative pathogen; thus, assessing its antibiotic susceptibility with standardized and
validated protocols is essential. In this work, we studied the pathogen response to
antibiotics using a genomic, a transcriptomic, and a phenotypic approach. A new
defined medium (CMMAB) was developed based on a metabolic model of P. salmonis.
CMMAB was formulated to increase bacterial growth in nutrient-limited conditions and
to be suitable for performing antibiotic susceptibility tests. Antibiotic resistance was
evaluated based on a comprehensive search of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs)
from P. salmonis genomes. Minimum inhibitory concentration assays were conducted
to test the pathogen susceptibility to antibiotics from drug categories with predicted
ARGs. In all tested P. salmonis strains, resistance to erythromycin, ampicillin, penicillin G,
streptomycin, spectinomycin, polymyxin B, ceftazidime, and trimethoprim was mediumdependent, showing resistance to higher antibiotic concentrations in the CMMAB
medium. The mechanism for antibiotic resistance to ampicillin in the defined medium
was further explored and was proven to be associated to a decrease in the bacterial
central metabolism, including the TCA cycle, the pentose-phosphate pathway, energy
production, and nucleotide metabolism, and it was not associated with decreased
growth rate of the bacterium or with the expression of any predicted ARG. Our results
suggest that nutrient scarcity plays a role in the bacterial antibiotic resistance, protecting
against the detrimental effects of antibiotics, and thus, we propose that P. salmonis
exhibits a metabolic resistance to ampicillin when growing in a nutrient-limited medium.