COLLEGE STATION, Texas, April 25, 2011 - Call them
the Jason Bournes of the bacteria world.
Going "off the grid," like rogue secret agents, some bacteria
avoid antibiotic treatments by essentially shutting down and hiding
until it's safe to come out again, says Thomas Wood, professor in
the Artie McFerrin Department of Chemical Engineering at Texas
A&M University.
This surreptitious and elaborate survival mechanism is explained
in the online April edition of "Nature Chemical Biology," which
details the research of Wood and his post doctoral student Xiaoxue
Wang along with colleagues Breann Brown, Wolfgang Peti and Rebecca
Page of Brown University.
"Through our research, we're understanding that some bacteria go
to 'sleep,' and that antibiotics only work on bacteria that are
metabolically active," Wood explains. "You need actively growing
bacteria to be susceptible to antibiotics. If the bacterium goes to
sleep, the antibiotics, no matter what they do, are not effective
because the bacterium is no longer doing the thing that the
antibiotic is trying to shut down."
It's an alternative method for survival, Wood says, that starkly
contrasts the widely studied genetically based approaches utilized
by bacteria through which bacteria gain resistance to antibiotics
as the result of mutations experienced throughout time. This
mutation-free response, however, demonstrates that some bacteria
need not mutate to survive external stressors, Wood says.
Instead, when triggered by an external stressor such as an
antibiotic, a bacterial cell can render itself dormant by
triggering an internal reaction that degrades the effectiveness of
its own internal antitoxins, Wood explains. With its antitoxins
damaged, the toxins present within the bacterial cell are left
unchecked and damage the cell's metabolic processes so that it
essentially shuts down, he adds.
It's self-inflicted damage but with a purpose.
"The cell normally doesn't want to hurt itself; it wants to grow
as fast as possible," Wood states; the raison d'être for a cell is
to make another cell," Wood says. "However, most bacteria have this
group of proteins, and if this group was active - if you got rid of
the antitoxins - this group of toxins would either kill the cell or
damage it."
Specifically, Wood and his colleagues found that when
encountering oxidative stress, their bacterial cells initiated a
process through which an antitoxin called MqsA was degraded, in
turn allowing the toxin MqsR to degrade all of the cells' messenger
RNA. This messenger RNA, Wood explains, plays a critical
intermediate role in the cell's process of manufacturing proteins,
so without it the cell can't make proteins. With the
protein-manufacturing factory shut down, the bacterial cell goes
dormant, and an antibiotic cannot "lock on" to the cell. When the
stressor is removed, the bacterial cells eventually come back
online and resume their normal activities, Wood says.
"It was the combination of the genetic studies at Texas A&M
with our structural studies at Brown University that demonstrated
that the proteins MqsR:MqsA form an entirely new family of
toxin:antitoxin systems," Page says. "Remarkably, we have shown
this system not only controls its own genes, but also many other
genes in E. coli, including the gene that controls the response to
oxidative stress."
This response mechanism, Wood emphasizes, does not replace the
mutation-based approaches that have for years characterized cell
behavior; it's merely another method in a multifaceted approach
undertaken by bacteria to ensure survival.
"A small community of bacteria is in a sense hedging its bet
against a threat to its survival by taking another approach," Wood
says. "To the bacteria, this is always a numbers game. In one
milliliter you can have a trillion bacterial cells, and they don't
always do the same thing under stress.
"If we can determine that this 'going to sleep' is the dominant
mechanism utilized by bacteria, then we can begin to figure out how
to 'wake them up' so that they will be more susceptible to the
antibiotic. This ideally would include simultaneously applying the
antibiotic and a chemical that wakes up the bacteria. That's the
goal - a more effective antibiotic."
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Contact: Thomas Wood at (979) 862-1588 or via email: Thomas.Wood@chemail.tamu.edu
or Ryan A. Garcia at (979) 845-9237 or via email: ryan.garcia99@tamu.edu.