Elucidation of the RamA regulon in Klebsiella pneumoniae reveals a role in LPS regulation.
De Majumdar. Shyamasree S; Yu. Jing J; Fookes. Maria M; McAteer. Sean P SP; Llobet. Enrique E; Finn. Sarah S; Spence. Shaun S; Monahan. Avril A; Monaghan. Avril A; Kissenpfennig. Adrien A; Ingram. Rebecca J RJ; Bengoechea. José J; Gally. David L DL; Fanning. Séamus S; Elborn. Joseph S JS; Schneiders. Thamarai T
Key Findings
- RamA controls many genes and reshapes the bacterial transcription landscape
- RamA boosts genes for lipid A production, altering the lipopolysaccharide structure
- These changes lower the bacteria’s sensitivity to LL‑37, colistin, and polymyxin B, and increase its ability to spread in the host
Practical Outcomes
- For health‑optimizing biohackers, the work mainly highlights how some bacteria can become tougher against natural immune defenses, underscoring the importance of infection prevention and cautious antibiotic use. It doesn’t provide new protocols or dosage guidance for LL‑37 supplementation.
Summary
The study shows that a bacterial protein called RamA changes the surface of Klebsiella pneumoniae, making it less vulnerable to the human immune peptide LL‑37 and some antibiotics. This helps the bacteria spread more easily in the body, but it doesn’t give any direct tips for people to use LL‑37 or improve health.
Abstract
Klebsiella pneumoniae is a significant human pathogen, in part due to high rates of multidrug resistance. RamA is an intrinsic regulator in K. pneumoniae established to be important for the bacterial response to antimicrobial challenge; however, little is known about its possible wider regulatory role in this organism during infection. In this work, we demonstrate that RamA is a global transcriptional regulator that significantly perturbs the transcriptional landscape of K. pneumoniae, resulting in altered microbe-drug or microbe-host response. This is largely due to the direct regulation of 68 genes associated with a myriad of cellular functions. Importantly, RamA directly binds and activates the lpxC, lpxL-2 and lpxO genes associated with lipid A biosynthesis, thus resulting in modifications within the lipid A moiety of the lipopolysaccharide. RamA-mediated alterations decrease susceptibility to colistin E, polymyxin B and human cationic antimicrobial peptide LL-37. Increased RamA levels reduce K. pneumoniae adhesion and uptake into macrophages, which is supported by in vivo infection studies, that demonstrate increased systemic dissemination of ramA overexpressing K. pneumoniae. These data establish that RamA-mediated regulation directly perturbs microbial surface properties, including lipid A biosynthesis, which facilitate evasion from the innate host response. This highlights RamA as a global regulator that confers pathoadaptive phenotypes with implications for our understanding of the pathogenesis of Enterobacter, Salmonella and Citrobacter spp. that express orthologous RamA proteins.
Study Information
pubmed
2015
2015-01-29T00:00:00.000Z
10.1371/journal.ppat.1004627
130
59