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Journal of Bacteriology, January 2004, p . 575-579, Vol . 186,
No . 2
PmrAB,
a Two-Component Regulatory System of Pseudomonas aeruginosa That
Modulates Resistance to Cationic Antimicrobial Peptides and Addition of
Aminoarabinose to Lipid A
Samuel M . Moskowitz,1 Robert K . Ernst,2 and
Samuel I . Miller2,3,4*
Departments of Pediatrics,1 Medicine,2 Microbiology,3
Genome Sciences, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle,
Washington 981954
Received 27 June 2003/ Accepted 19 October 2003
Spontaneous polymyxin-resistant mutants of Pseudomonas aeruginosa
were isolated . The mutations responsible for this phenotype
were mapped to a two-component signal transduction system similar to
PmrAB of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium . Lipid A of
these mutants contained aminoarabinose, an inducible modification
that is associated with polymyxin resistance . Thus, P . aeruginosa
possesses a mechanism that induces resistance to cationic antimicrobial
peptides in response to environmental conditions .
Cationic antimicrobial peptides (CAPs) are a widely conserved host
defense mechanism of plants and animals . Their antimicrobial effects
can be attributed to their amphipathic, detergent-like nature, which
enables individual CAP molecules to interact with both anionic and
hydrophobic components of the bacterial envelope . CAPs bind to
lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a major component of the gram-negative cell
surface, through interactions with phosphates and fatty acids of LPS
core and lipid A moieties (31) . These molecules
cross the outer membrane and periplasm, disrupt the membrane
potential of the inner membrane, and thereby cause cell death (25) .
In vertebrates, the CAPs that pathogens encounter at epithelial
surfaces are a major component of innate immunity, an ancient system
of host defense that is stimulated via receptors that recognize
pathogen-associated molecular patterns (29) .
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an opportunistic pathogen of humans
that causes infections in those with host defense defects such
as epidermal injury, immunodeficiency, and impaired epithelial
clearance mechanisms . In the human host, P . aeruginosa is exposed
to endogenous CAPs such as ß-defensins (37) and
cathelicidins (5) at epithelial surfaces . It may
also encounter exogenous CAPs in this setting, when agents such as
the polymyxins, acylated cyclic CAPs synthesized by the gram-positive
soil bacterium Bacillus polymyxa, are used as antibiotics .
Since the discovery and initial clinical use of the polymyxins more
than 50 years ago, both clinical (12,
23, 26) and experimental (7,
16, 32) P . aeruginosa
polymyxin resistance has been reported . P . aeruginosa
possesses proteases that can degrade some CAPs (35); in
addition, physiological (or "adaptive") polymyxin resistance may
occur in response to membrane stresses such as divalent cation
limitation (7, 13,
27, 30) and polymyxin exposure (9,
16, 36), the latter being
associated with the modulation of lipid A fatty acid composition (9) .
The P . aeruginosa PhoPQ two-component system contributes to
the induction of these resistance phenotypes; however, its role
appears to be complex (13, 27), and the
potential roles of other regulatory systems related to PmrAB, a
response regulator-sensor kinase pair that regulates polymyxin
resistance in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (18,
34), have not been defined .
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Isolation of polymyxin-resistant mutants of P .
aeruginosa . |
Conditions that physiologically induce polymyxin resistance have not
been fully defined for P . aeruginosa and could involve
multiple regulatory systems . In order to identify regulators
important for this resistance, spontaneous mutants of wild-type P .
aeruginosa (strain PAK; obtained from S . Lory) were isolated from
late-exponential-phase cultures by selection on Luria-Bertani (LB)
plates containing 20 to 50 µg of polymyxin B (USB/Amersham) per ml .
After incubation for 72 to 96 h at ambient temperature (approximately
25°C), 12 initial isolates were colony purified, of which 6 displayed
a stable resistance pattern, as indicated by growth on LB plates
containing polymyxin B (20 µg/ml) after two passages through LB broth
lacking CAPs . Among these six isolates, two distinct phenotypes were
observed, differing primarily in terms of growth rate and degree of
polymyxin resistance . For each phenotype, representative mutant
strains, designated PAKpmrB6 and PAKpmrB12, were
selected for characterization . The polymyxin-resistant strains grew
more slowly on solid media than the wild-type strain but had growth
rates in liquid media that were similar to that of the wild-type
strain (generation time in LB broth at 37°C at mid-log phase,
50
min) . The polymyxin resistance of PAKpmrB6 and PAKpmrB12
strains was confirmed by a quantitative bactericidal assay performed
as described previously (39), with incubation in
the presence of polymyxin B for 30 min, dilution, and plating for the
enumeration of surviving CFU . For all bactericidal assays, each
strain was tested in triplicate at each peptide concentration .
Relative to that for the wild-type strain, the polymyxin
concentrations resulting in a 50% reduction in the number of CFU (50%
lethal dose [LD50]) for PAKpmrB6 and for PAKpmrB12
were about 6 and 16 times as high, respectively (Table
1) .
| TABLE 1 . Resistance of P . aeruginosa PAKpmrB strains to
CAPs
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Cross-resistance of polymyxin-resistant strains to
additional CAP classes .
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In other gram-negative bacteria, resistance to polymyxin may confer
cross-resistance to other structural classes of CAPs due to
structural modification of a common drug target (e.g., LPS),
regulatory mutation, or both . Therefore, polymyxin-resistant strains
of P . aeruginosa were tested for cross-resistance to
additional CAPs . Quantitative bactericidal assays (39) were
performed with the following modifications: cells were diluted
to 2 x 104 CFU per ml prior to
assay, and assays of human ß-defensin activity were performed in 1.4%
tryptic soy broth with 10 mM Na phosphate (pH 7.4) rather than
Mueller-Hinton broth . The PAKpmrB6 and PAKpmrB12
strains displayed cross-resistance to defensins, protegrin, and
-helical
peptides, as reflected by relative LD50s (compared to
those of the PAK parental strain) for human ß-defensin-2 (4),
protegrin-1 (39), and C18G, an
-helical
peptide derived from the carboxy terminus of platelet factor IV (11),
that ranged from 3 to >200 (Table 1) . In addition,
these strains were also resistant to human ß-defensin-1, rabbit
-defensin
NP1, and the
-helical
cathelicidins CAP18, SMAP29, and LL37 (data not shown) . These
results indicate that the P . aeruginosa PmrAB system regulates
resistance to a variety of structural classes of CAP .
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Identification of the P . aeruginosa PmrAB
homologue . |
Potential homologues of the S . enterica serovar Typhimurium
pmrAB locus were identified by BLAST homology comparisons (1)
of the P . aeruginosa Genome Project database (www.pseudomonas.com) .
This analysis revealed strong matches for pmrA in the P .
aeruginosa open reading frames designated PA2479 (probability
score of 6e-46) and PA4776 (4e-48) and
corresponding matches for pmrB in PA2480 (4e-26)
and PA4777 (2e-28) . Therefore, insertion mutations
targeting these loci were constructed in the polymyxin-resistant
strains . A loss of resistance was associated only with the disruption
of the locus corresponding to PA4776 (pmrA) and PA4777 (pmrB)
in P . aeruginosa, which encode a response regulator and a sensor
histidine kinase displaying, respectively, 44 and 32% identity
and 59 and 48% similarity to their S . enterica serovar Typhimurium
homologues . A PAKpmrB6-derived strain with a gentamicin resistance
cassette inserted within pmrA was as susceptible to killing
by polymyxin as the parental PAK strain (Fig . 1A) . The
disruption of pmrA in PAKpmrB12 gave similar results
(data not shown) . The polymyxin resistance phenotypes of these
strains were completely dependent on an intact pmrAB locus . In
contrast, the disruption of phoP in strain PAKpmrB6 did
not diminish the resistance phenotype (Fig . 1A) .
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FIG . 1 . Role of the pmrAB locus in P . aeruginosa polymyxin
resistance . (A) Resistance of strains with an aacC1 (Gmr)
cassette insertion . Triangles, PAKpmrB6 pmrA::aacC1;
circles, PAKpmrB6; squares, PAKpmrB6 phoP::aacC1 .
(B) Resistance of strains with an episomal copy of the indicated
pmrAB allele . Diamonds, PAKpmrA::aacC1(pMMB67HE::pmrAB6);
circles, PAKpmrB6; inverted triangles, PAKpmrA::aacC1(pMMB67HE::pmrAB+).
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Constitutive expression of the polymyxin resistance
phenotype due to mutations in pmrB .
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To test their ability to confer constitutive polymyxin resistance on
recipient P . aeruginosa strains, pmrAB alleles from strains
PAKpmrB6 and PAKpmrB12 were amplified by PCR from
chromosomal DNA and cloned into the IPTG (isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside)-inducible
broad-host-range expression plasmid pMMB67HE (15) .
Strains carrying a plasmid with these alleles were then tested for
resistance to polymyxin . Bacteria were grown in the presence of IPTG
under Mg2+-replete conditions that do not induce
physiological polymyxin resistance . The pmrAB6 allele (but not
the wild-type pmrAB allele or pmrA6 alone) conferred
constitutive resistance on the pmrAB-null strain PAKpmrA::aacC1(Fig.
1B) . These results suggested the presence of a
mutation in the pmrB6 allele . Similar results were obtained
for the pmrAB12 allele, indicating the presence of a mutation
in pmrB12 . Sequencing of these pmrB alleles revealed
distinct missense mutations, L243Q in PAKpmrB6 (single nucleotide
substitutions T5365486A) and A248V in PAKpmrB12 (C5365501T),
in the histidine box motif of the sensor kinase, adjacent to
the putative active-site histidine, H249 . The H-box motif mediates
phosphotransfer to the response regulator (PmrA) following sensor
kinase activation and dimerization . Although the effect of any given
H-box mutation cannot be readily predicted, the P . aeruginosa pmrB
mutations are quite similar to activating mutations previously
identified in ntrB (glnL), the nitrogen regulator II sensor
kinase of Escherichia coli (2) . Specifically,
both the pmrB6 allele and the glnL1012 allele carry
mutations at a position corresponding to a conserved leucine 6
residues towards the amino terminus from the active-site histidine,
and the pmrB12 allele and glnL1004 allele carry
identical mutations at a position corresponding to a conserved
alanine immediately amino terminal to this histidine . Because the
PmrAB system is known to stimulate aminoarabinose synthesis in S .
enterica serovar Typhimurium, it is plausible that the pmrB
H-box mutations selectively impair PmrB phosphatase activity, leading
to constitutive activation of the PmrA regulon .
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The pmrAB locus modulates the addition of
aminoarabinose to lipid A in P . aeruginosa .
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Loci within the genome of P . aeruginosa strain PAO1, designated
PA3552 to PA3559 (pmrHFIJKLME), PA3540 (algD), and PA2022 (ugd),
are homologues of PmrA-regulated S . enterica serovar Typhimurium
genes that encode aminoarabinose synthetic enzymes essential
for polymyxin resistance (17, 19) . Because
the polymyxin-resistant strains were thus expected to have
aminoarabinose-modified LPS, lipid A was purified from them and
analyzed . P . aeruginosa strains PAK, PAKpmrB6, PAKpmrB12,
PAKpmrB6 pmrPAB::aacC1,
and PAKpmrB12 pmrPAB::aacC1
were grown to stationary phase under conditions that do not
induce physiologic aminoarabinose addition (LB broth with 1 mM MgCl2
but without polymyxin B) . Lipid A was isolated and analyzed as
described previously (13) by negative-ion-matrix-assisted
laser desorption ionization-time of flight (MALDI-TOF) mass
spectrometry (MS) by using a BIFLEX-III mass spectrometer (Bruker
Daltonics Inc., Billerica, Mass.) . PAK lipid A had mass peaks
corresponding to the previously determined structures of P .
aeruginosa lipid A (6, 22) containing
five (m/z 1,447) or six (m/z 1,617) fatty acid
substitutions (Fig . 2A) . In contrast, PAKpmrB6
lipid A had additional mass peaks at m/z 1,748 and m/z
1,879 (Fig . 2B) corresponding to the addition of one or
two 4-aminoarabinose moieties (change in m/z [ m/z],
131) to the wild-type lipid A structure (Fig . 2C) .
The mass spectrum for PAKpmrB12 lipid A was indistinguishable
from that of PAKpmrB6 (data not shown) . Analyses of mass
spectra for lipid A isolated from the PAKpmrB6 pmrPAB::aacC1
and PAKpmrB12 pmrPAB::aacC1
strains, in which the pmrPAB genes have been replaced by a
gentamicin cassette, gave results similar to those for the wild type,
indicating the PmrAB dependence of this modification in these
strains . Because MALDI-TOF analysis is not quantitative, differences
in polymyxin resistance observed among mutant strains may be
due to differences in aminoarabinose content . Alternatively,
differences may be due to changes in labile modifications of lipid A
(e.g., phosphoethanolamine) lost during sample preparation (41)
or to changes in nonlipid A surface structures, such as proximal LPS
core sugar phosphates (21) or LPS-associated lipoproteins
(20) . Despite these possibilities, these results
indicate that the P . aeruginosa PmrAB system mediates the
addition of aminoarabinose to lipid A and provides additional support
for the importance of this outer membrane modification in the
polymyxin resistance of gram-negative bacteria .
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FIG . 2 . Association of pmrB mutations with constitutive addition
of aminoarabinose to P . aeruginosa lipid A . (A) MALDI-TOF
negative-ion mode analysis of lipid A purified from P . aeruginosa
strain PAK . In the negative-ion mode, observed molecular species lack at
least one proton: [M H]- .
The difference between [M H]-
at m/z 1,447 and m/z 1,617 ( m/z
= 170) in the mass spectrum indicates the loss of 3-hydroxydecanoate
from position 3 of the reducing diglucosamine (right-hand ring in panel
C) . (B) Mass spectrum for lipid A from strain PAKpmrB6 . The
difference between [M H]-
at m/z 1,617, 1,748, and 1,879 ( m/z
= 131) indicates the addition of aminoarabinose to the 1 and 4'
phosphates of lipid A . (C) Structure of P . aeruginosa lipid A
without and with aminoarabinose . The X- symbol at the right
side of the lower structure represents either H (corresponding to m/z
1,748) or aminoarabinose (corresponding to m/z 1,879) . The fatty
acids depicted are 3-hydroxydecanoate (3-OH C10:0), laurate
(C12:0), 2-hydroxylaurate (2-OH C12:0), and
3-hydroxylaurate (3-OH C12:0).
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The isolation of spontaneous polymyxin-resistant mutants of P .
aeruginosa, described here for the first time, was a prerequisite
to defining the PmrAB two-component system as an important regulator
of P . aeruginosa resistance to polymyxin and other CAPs . The
polymyxin resistance phenotypes of P . aeruginosa strains were
associated with mutations in the H-box motif of the PmrB sensor
kinase . Both the polymyxin resistance of these mutants and the
addition of aminoarabinose to their lipid A under Mg2+-replete
conditions were dependent on the mutated pmrAB locus . These
regulatory mutants were highly resistant to a variety of CAPs,
indicating that the P . aeruginosa PmrAB system can induce CAP
resistance .
The physiologic conditions that induce P . aeruginosa CAP resistance
through PmrAB two-component signaling are not known . In S . enterica
serovar Typhimurium, PmrB may function to sense the ionization
state of iron (40); however, its periplasmic domain, the
presumed site of this sensing capability, lacks homology to that of
P . aeruginosa . Unlike S . enterica serovar Typhimurium,
the viability of P . aeruginosa at high ferrous iron
concentrations is not diminished by a disruption of pmrAB, and
extracellular iron does not induce polymyxin resistance in a pmrAB-dependent
fashion (S . M . Moskowitz and S . I . Miller, unpublished results) .
Moreover, the P . aeruginosa PAO1 genome lacks a homologue of
the pmrD gene (33), an important regulator
of PmrAB activation in S . enterica serovar Typhimurium (24) .
Thus, the activation of PmrAB in P . aeruginosa may differ
significantly from that in S . enterica serovar Typhimurium .
The levels of transcriptional regulation of the pmrAB locus
in P . aeruginosa strains also appear to differ . Polymyxin B
and other CAPs induce transcription of the P . aeruginosa pmrAB
locus in a PhoPQ-independent fashion (28) . In contrast, in
S . enterica serovar Typhimurium, subinhibitory concentrations of
CAPs induce CAP resistance in a PhoPQ-dependent fashion (3) .
Nonetheless, both divalent cation deficiency (7,
13, 27) and acidity (Moskowitz
and Miller, unpublished results) induce mild polymyxin resistance in
wild-type P . aeruginosa, similar to effects in S . enterica
serovar Typhimurium that are mediated by the PhoPQ and PmrAB systems,
respectively (38) . Thus, in both organisms, the
induction of CAP resistance, triggered by various physiologic
conditions acting through these two-component systems, may represent
an important step in adaptation to host environments .
P . aeruginosa strains isolated from infants with cystic fibrosis
(8) have aminoarabinose addition to lipid A (13)
as an early adaptation, consistent with the notion that CAPs impose
selective pressure on P . aeruginosa in the airways of
individuals with cystic fibrosis (37) . Moreover,
inhaled polymyxin E (colistin) is commonly used to treat cystic
fibrosis airway infection in Europe and Australia (12,
14, 26), and its intravenous use has
also been advocated for the treatment of multidrug-resistant
P . aeruginosa (10) . Colistin-resistant strains of
P . aeruginosa isolated from patients receiving inhaled colistin
as routine maintenance therapy (12,
14) have alterations in the lipid A structure, including the
addition of aminoarabinose (S . M . Moskowitz, R . K . Ernst, and S . I .
Miller, unpublished results) . Such lipid A modifications indicate
potential targets for the development of novel antipseudomonal agents
that could act synergistically with polymyxin .
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Nucleotide sequence accession numbers .
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Sequences of PAK pmrB wild-type, pmrB6, and pmrB12 alleles
have been registered with the GenBank database under accession
numbers
AY493419 to
AY493421 .
This work was supported by a Howard Hughes Physician Postdoctoral
Fellowship, a Poncin Scholarship, Public Health Service award K08
HL67903 from the NHLBI, and Child Health Research Center award K12
HD043376 from the NICHD (S.M.M.) . It was also supported by a Cystic
Fibrosis Foundation postdoctoral fellowship (R.K.E.), research grant
Z097 from the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation (S.I.M.), and Public Health
Service award R01 AI047938 from NIAID (S.I.M.) .
We thank Robert Lehrer (UCLA), Richard Darveau (University of
Washington), Michael Selsted (UC Irvine), Michael Zasloff (Georgetown
University), and Brian Tack (University of Iowa) for gifts of
antimicrobial peptides and Steven Lory (Harvard Medical School) for
strains and molecular reagents . We also thank Martin Bader, Jane
Burns, David D'Argenio, Ron Gibson, and Tina Guina for critical
reviews of the manuscript .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Departments of
Medicine, Microbiology, and Genome Sciences, University of Washington School of
Medicine, Room K140 HSB, Box 357710, Seattle, WA 98195-7710 . Phone: (206)
616-5107 . Fax: (206) 616-4295 . E-mail: millersi@u.washington.edu.
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