Cholesterol enhances Helicobacter pylori resistance to antibiotics and LL-37.
McGee. David J DJ; George. Alika E AE; Trainor. Elizabeth A EA; Horton. Katherine E KE; Hildebrandt. Ellen E; Testerman. Traci L TL
Key Findings
- H. pylori grown with cholesterol is >100‑fold more resistant to eight antibiotics and LL-37.
- The bacterial enzyme Cgt that adds a sugar to cholesterol is needed for full virulence in animals.
- Mutating lipid A‑related genes (lpxE) removes cholesterol‑dependent resistance to polymyxin B and colistin, but not to other drugs.
Practical Outcomes
- High cholesterol in the gut may blunt the effectiveness of antibiotics and natural antimicrobial peptides against H. pylori, suggesting that managing cholesterol levels could support infection control. However, the findings do not provide a direct protocol for using LL-37 or specific supplements; they mainly highlight a potential downside of excess cholesterol for gut bacterial resistance.
Summary
The study shows that when the stomach bug Helicobacter pylori grabs cholesterol from the host and adds a sugar to it, it becomes far more resistant to many antibiotics and the natural antimicrobial peptide LL-37. This cholesterol‑driven resistance can be partly undone by mutating bacterial genes that handle cholesterol or lipid A, but the bacteria still stay dangerous in animals.
Abstract
The human gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori steals host cholesterol, modifies it by glycosylation, and incorporates the glycosylated cholesterol onto its surface via a cholesterol glucosyltransferase, encoded by cgt. The impact of cholesterol on H. pylori antimicrobial resistance is unknown. H. pylori strain 26695 was cultured in Ham's F12 chemically defined medium in the presence or absence of cholesterol. The two cultures were subjected to overnight incubations with serial 2-fold dilutions of 12 antibiotics, six antifungals, and seven antimicrobial peptides (including LL-37 cathelicidin and human alpha and beta defensins). Of 25 agents tested, cholesterol-grown H. pylori cells were substantially more resistant (over 100-fold) to nine agents than were H. pylori cells grown without cholesterol. These nine agents included eight antibiotics and LL-37. H. pylori was susceptible to the antifungal drug pimaricin regardless of cholesterol presence in the culture medium. A cgt mutant retained cholesterol-dependent resistance to most antimicrobials but displayed increased susceptibility to colistin, suggesting an involvement of lipid A. Mutation of lpxE, encoding lipid A1-phosphatase, led to loss of cholesterol-dependent resistance to polymyxin B and colistin but not other antimicrobials tested. The cgt mutant was severely attenuated in gerbils, indicating that glycosylation is essential in vivo. These findings suggest that cholesterol plays a vital role in virulence and contributes to the intrinsic antibiotic resistance of H. pylori.
Study Information
pubmed
2011
2011-04-04T00:00:00.000Z
10.1128/aac.00016-11