Different effects of transcriptional regulators MarA, SoxS and Rob on susceptibility of Escherichia coli to cationic antimicrobial peptides (CAMPs): Rob-dependent CAMP induction of the marRAB operon.
Warner. Douglas M DM; Levy. Stuart B SB
Key Findings
- Overexpressing marA makes E. coli less vulnerable to LL‑37 and other cationic peptides, while overexpressing soxS does not protect and can increase susceptibility.
- Rob is required for LL‑37‑induced activation of the marRAB operon, linking LL‑37 exposure to bacterial drug‑resistance pathways.
- Deleting the efflux pumps acrAB or tolC makes E. coli more sensitive to LL‑37, showing these pumps help pump the peptide out of the cell.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the study indicates that using LL‑37 as a supplement is unlikely to boost personal health and could potentially encourage bacterial resistance if used in ways that expose microbes. There are no actionable dosing or protocol recommendations for humans based on this work.
Summary
This research shows that the human antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 can make E. coli bacteria turn on resistance genes, especially through a regulator called Rob, which can make the bacteria harder to kill with antibiotics and other antimicrobial peptides. Different bacterial regulators (MarA, SoxS, Rob) affect how the bacteria respond, but the findings don’t give any direct tips for human health or supplementation.
Abstract
Cationic antimicrobial peptides (CAMPs), a component of the mammalian immune system, protect the host from bacterial infections. The roles of the Escherichia coli transcriptional regulators MarA, SoxS and Rob in susceptibility to these peptides were examined. Overexpression of marA, either in an antibiotic-resistant marR mutant or from a plasmid, decreased bacterial susceptibility to CAMPs. Overexpression of the soxS gene from a plasmid, which decreased susceptibility to antibiotics, unexpectedly caused no decrease in CAMP susceptibility; instead it produced increased susceptibility to different CAMPs. Deletion or overexpression of rob had little effect on CAMP susceptibility. The marRAB operon was upregulated when E. coli was incubated in sublethal amounts of CAMPs polymyxin B, LL-37 or human beta-defensin-1; however, this upregulation required Rob. Deletion of acrAB increased bacterial susceptibility to polymyxin B, LL-37 and human beta-defensin-1 peptides. Deletion of tolC yielded an even greater increase in susceptibility to these peptides and also led to increased susceptibility to human alpha-defensin-2. Inhibition of cellular proton-motive force increased peptide susceptibility for wild-type and acrAB deletion strains; however, it decreased susceptibility of tolC mutants. These findings demonstrate that CAMPs are both inducers of marA-mediated drug resistance through interaction with Rob and also substrates for efflux in E. coli. The three related transcriptional regulators show different effects on bacterial cell susceptibility to CAMPs.
Study Information
pubmed
2009
2009-11-19T00:00:00.000Z
10.1099/mic.0.033415-0
61
51