Doxycycline is an antibiotic commonly used to treat Lyme disease and other bacterial infections. The MIC and minimum bactericidal concentration (MBC) for Borrelia burgdorferi have been investigated by different groups but were experimentally established in this study as a function of input cell density. We demonstrated that B. burgdorferi treated in the stationary phase has a higher probability of regrowth following removal of antibiotic. In addition, we determined experimentally and mathematically that the spirochetes which persist posttreatment do not have a longer lag phase but exhibit a lower growth rate than untreated spirochetes. Finally, we found that treating the spirochetes by pulse-dosing did not eliminate growth or reduce the persister population in vitro. From these data, we propose that B. burgdorferi persister development is stochastic and driven by slowed growth.
Cigarette smoke (CS) predisposes exposed individuals to respiratory infections not only by suppressing immune response but also by enhancing the virulence of pathogenic bacteria. As per our observations, in methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus strain USA300, CS extract (CSE) potentiates biofilm formation via the down-regulation of quorum-sensing regulon accessory gene regulator. Because accessory gene regulator is a global regulator of the staphylococcal virulome, in the present study we sought to identify the effects of CS exposure on staphylococcal gene expression using RNAseq. Comparative analysis of RNAseq profiles revealed the upregulation of important virulence genes encoding surface adhesins (fibronectin-and fibrinogen-binding proteins A and B and clumping factor B) and proteins involved in immune evasion, such as staphylocoagulase, staphylococcal protein A, and nuclease. In concurrence with the RNAseq data, we observed: (1) significant up-regulation of the ability of CSE-exposed USA300 to evade phagocytosis by macrophages and neutrophils, a known function of staphylococcal protein A; and (2) twofold higher (P , 0.001) number of CSE-exposed USA300 escaping neutrophil extracellular trap-mediated killing by neutrophils as a result of CS-mediated induction of nuclease. Importantly, in three different mouse strains, C57BL6/J, Balb/C, and A/J, we observed significantly higher pulmonary bacterial burden in animals infected with CSEexposed USA300 as compared with medium-exposed control USA300. Taken together, these observations indicate that bioactive chemicals in CS induce hypervirulence by augmenting the ability of USA300 to evade bactericidal functions of leukocytes, such as phagocytosis and neutrophil extracellular trap-mediated killing.
Recent studies have shown that
Borrelia burgdorferi
can form antibiotic-tolerant persisters in the presence of microbiostatic drugs such as doxycycline. Precisely how this occurs is yet unknown. Our goal was to examine gene transcription by
B. burgdorferi
following doxycycline treatment in an effort to identify both persister-associated genes and possible targets for antimicrobial intervention. To do so, we performed next-generation RNA sequencing on doxycycline-treated spirochetes and treated spirochetes following regrowth, comparing them to untreated
B. burgdorferi
. A number of genes were perturbed and most of those which were statistically significant were down-regulated in the treated versus the untreated or treated/re-grown. Genes upregulated in the treated
B. burgdorferi
included a number of
Erp
genes and
rplU
, a 50S ribosomal protein. Among those genes associated with post-treatment regrowth were
bba74
(Oms28),
bba03
, several peptide ABC transporters,
ospA, ospB
,
ospC
,
dbpA
and
bba62
. Studies are underway to determine if these same genes are perturbed in
B. burgdorferi
treated with doxycycline in a host environment.
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