TY - JOUR
T1 - Acinetobacter baumannii OxyR Regulates the Transcriptional Response to Hydrogen Peroxide
AU - Juttukonda, Lillian J.
AU - Green, Erin R.
AU - Lonergan, Zachery R.
AU - Heffern, Marie C.
AU - Chang, Christopher J.
AU - Skaara, Eric P.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2018 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2019/1/1
Y1 - 2019/1/1
N2 - Acinetobacter baumannii is a Gram-negative opportunistic pathogen that causes diverse infections, including pneumonia, bacteremia, and wound infections. Due to multiple intrinsic and acquired antimicrobial-resistance mechanisms, A. baumannii isolates are commonly multidrug resistant, and infections are notoriously difficult to treat. The World Health Organization recently highlighted carbapenem-resistant A. baumannii as a “critical priority” for the development of new antimicrobi-als because of the risk to human health posed by this organism. Therefore, it is important to discover the mechanisms used by A. baumannii to survive stresses encountered during infection in order to identify new drug targets. In this study, by use of in vivo imaging, we identified hydrogen peroxide (H 2 O 2 ) as a stressor produced in the lung during A. baumannii infection and defined OxyR as a transcriptional regulator of the H 2 O 2 stress response. Upon exposure to H 2 O 2 , A. baumannii differentially transcribes several hundred genes. However, the transcriptional upregulation of genes predicted to detoxify hydrogen peroxide is abolished in an A. baumannii strain in which the transcriptional regulator oxyR is genetically inactivated. Moreover, inactivation of oxyR in both antimicrobial-susceptible and multidrug-resistant A. baumannii strains impairs growth in the presence of H 2 O 2 . OxyR is a direct regulator of katE and ahpF1, which encode the major H 2 O 2 -degrading enzymes in A. baumannii, as confirmed through measurement of promoter binding by recombinant OxyR in electromobility shift assays. Finally, an oxyR mutant is less fit than wild-type A. baumannii during infection of the murine lung. This work reveals a mechanism used by this important human pathogen to survive H 2 O 2 stress encountered during infection.
AB - Acinetobacter baumannii is a Gram-negative opportunistic pathogen that causes diverse infections, including pneumonia, bacteremia, and wound infections. Due to multiple intrinsic and acquired antimicrobial-resistance mechanisms, A. baumannii isolates are commonly multidrug resistant, and infections are notoriously difficult to treat. The World Health Organization recently highlighted carbapenem-resistant A. baumannii as a “critical priority” for the development of new antimicrobi-als because of the risk to human health posed by this organism. Therefore, it is important to discover the mechanisms used by A. baumannii to survive stresses encountered during infection in order to identify new drug targets. In this study, by use of in vivo imaging, we identified hydrogen peroxide (H 2 O 2 ) as a stressor produced in the lung during A. baumannii infection and defined OxyR as a transcriptional regulator of the H 2 O 2 stress response. Upon exposure to H 2 O 2 , A. baumannii differentially transcribes several hundred genes. However, the transcriptional upregulation of genes predicted to detoxify hydrogen peroxide is abolished in an A. baumannii strain in which the transcriptional regulator oxyR is genetically inactivated. Moreover, inactivation of oxyR in both antimicrobial-susceptible and multidrug-resistant A. baumannii strains impairs growth in the presence of H 2 O 2 . OxyR is a direct regulator of katE and ahpF1, which encode the major H 2 O 2 -degrading enzymes in A. baumannii, as confirmed through measurement of promoter binding by recombinant OxyR in electromobility shift assays. Finally, an oxyR mutant is less fit than wild-type A. baumannii during infection of the murine lung. This work reveals a mechanism used by this important human pathogen to survive H 2 O 2 stress encountered during infection.
KW - Acinetobacter baumannii
KW - Hydrogen peroxide
KW - In vivo imaging
KW - OxyR
KW - RNA sequencing
KW - Transcriptional regulation
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U2 - 10.1128/IAI.00413-18
DO - 10.1128/IAI.00413-18
M3 - Article
C2 - 30297527
AN - SCOPUS:85058894750
SN - 0019-9567
VL - 87
JO - Infection and Immunity
JF - Infection and Immunity
IS - 1
M1 - e00413
ER -