Resistance mutations generate divergent antibiotic susceptibility profiles against translation inhibitors. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Mutations conferring resistance to translation inhibitors often alter the structure of rRNA. Reduced susceptibility to distinct structural antibiotic classes may, therefore, emerge when a common ribosomal binding site is perturbed, which significantly reduces the clinical utility of these agents. The translation inhibitors negamycin and tetracycline interfere with tRNA binding to the aminoacyl-tRNA site on the small 30S ribosomal subunit. However, two negamycin resistance mutations display unexpected differential antibiotic susceptibility profiles. Mutant U1060A in 16S Escherichia coli rRNA is resistant to both antibiotics, whereas mutant U1052G is simultaneously resistant to negamycin and hypersusceptible to tetracycline. Using a combination of microbiological, biochemical, single-molecule fluorescence transfer experiments, and X-ray crystallography, we define the specific structural defects in the U1052G mutant 70S E. coli ribosome that explain its divergent negamycin and tetracycline susceptibility profiles. Unexpectedly, the U1052G mutant ribosome possesses a second tetracycline binding site that correlates with its hypersusceptibility. The creation of a previously unidentified antibiotic binding site raises the prospect of identifying similar phenomena in antibiotic-resistant pathogens in the future.

publication date

  • July 5, 2016

Research

keywords

  • Anti-Bacterial Agents
  • Protein Synthesis Inhibitors
  • Ribosomes
  • Tetracycline

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC4961145

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 84978914890

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1073/pnas.1605127113

PubMed ID

  • 27382179

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 113

issue

  • 29