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Discovery and Characterization of a Nitroreductase Capable of Conferring Bacterial Resistance to Chloramphenicol.

Citation
Crofts, T. S., et al. “Discovery And Characterization Of A Nitroreductase Capable Of Conferring Bacterial Resistance To Chloramphenicol.”. Cell Chemical Biology, pp. 559-570.e6.
Center Washington University in St Louis
Author Terence S Crofts, Pratyush Sontha, Amber O King, Bin Wang, Brent A Biddy, Nicole Zanolli, John Gaumnitz, Gautam Dantas
Keywords E. cloacae, H. influenzae, amphenicols, antibiotics, chloramphenicol, metronidazole, nfsB, nitroreductase, resistance, synergy
Abstract

Widespread antibiotic resistance has led to the reappraisal of abandoned antibiotics including chloramphenicol. However, enzyme(s) underlying one form of chloramphenicol resistance, nitroreduction, have eluded identification. Here we demonstrate that expression of the Haemophilus influenzae nitroreductase gene nfsB confers chloramphenicol resistance in Escherichia coli. We characterized the enzymatic product of H. influenzae NfsB acting on chloramphenicol and found it to be amino-chloramphenicol. Kinetic analysis revealed reduction of diverse substrates including the incomplete reduction of 5-nitro antibiotics metronidazole and nitrofurantoin, likely resulting in activation of these antibiotic pro-drugs to their cytotoxic forms. We observed that expression of the H. influenzae nfsB gene in E. coli results in significantly increased susceptibility to metronidazole. Finally, we found that in this strain metronidazole attenuates chloramphenicol resistance synergistically, and in vitro metronidazole weakly inhibits chloramphenicol reduction by NfsB. Our findings reveal the underpinnings of a chloramphenicol resistance mechanism nearly 70 years after its description.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Cell chemical biology
Volume
26
Issue
4
Number of Pages
559-570.e6
Date Published
12/2019
ISSN Number
2451-9448
DOI
10.1016/j.chembiol.2019.01.007
Alternate Journal
Cell Chem Biol
PMID
30799223
PMCID
PMC6474809
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