Salicylate-inducible antibiotic resistance in Pseudomonas cepacia associated with absence of a pore-forming outer membrane protein

JL Burns, DK Clark - Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 1992 - Am Soc Microbiol
JL Burns, DK Clark
Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 1992Am Soc Microbiol
The most common mechanism of antibiotic resistance in multiply resistant Pseudomonas
cepacia is decreased porin-mediated outer membrane permeability. In some gram-negative
organisms this form of antibiotic resistance can be induced by growth in the presence of
weak acids, such as salicylates, which suppress porin synthesis. To determine the effects of
salicylates on outer membrane permeability of P. cepacia, a susceptible laboratory strain,
249-2, was grown in 10 mM sodium salicylate. Antibiotic susceptibility and uptake, as well as …
The most common mechanism of antibiotic resistance in multiply resistant Pseudomonas cepacia is decreased porin-mediated outer membrane permeability. In some gram-negative organisms this form of antibiotic resistance can be induced by growth in the presence of weak acids, such as salicylates, which suppress porin synthesis. To determine the effects of salicylates on outer membrane permeability of P. cepacia, a susceptible laboratory strain, 249-2, was grown in 10 mM sodium salicylate. Antibiotic susceptibility and uptake, as well as outer membrane protein patterns, were compared between strain 249-2 grown with and without salicylates. The MICs of chloramphenicol, trimethoprim, ciprofloxacin, and ceftazidime were compared between organisms grown in standard and salicylate-containing medium and are as follows: chloramphenicol, 12.5 versus 100 micrograms/ml; trimethoprim, 0.78 versus 3.125 micrograms/ml; ciprofloxacin, 0.4 versus 1.56 micrograms/ml; ceftazidime, 3.125 versus 3.125 micrograms/ml. The permeability of beta-lactam antibiotics was calculated from the rate of hydrolysis of the chromogenic cephalosporin, PADAC. There was no significant difference between strains grown in the presence and absence of salicylate. By using high-pressure liquid chromatography quantitation of loss from culture medium, the effect of 10 mM salicylate on the cellular permeability of chloramphenicol was measured in strain 249-2 by introduction of a plasmid which encodes production of chloramphenicol acetyltransferase. After 1 h of incubation, 18.5% +/- 1.54% versus 70.1% +/- 3.52%, and after 2 h, 4.20% +/- 1.65% versus 41.90% +/- 2.16% remained in supernatants from organisms grown in the absence and presence of 10 mM salicylate, respectively. Outer membrane protein pattern analysis demonstrated the absence of a protein of apparent molecular weight of 40,000 when strain 249-2 was grown in the presence of 10 mM salicylate. To determine whether this protein functioned as a porin, reconstituted membrane vesicles were constructed to assess antibiotic permeability. Vesicles constructed with this salicylate-suppressible outer membrane protein (OpcS) were permeable to chloramphenicol but not to penicillin G. These findings suggest that OpcS is a selective, antibiotic-permeable porin which can be suppressed by growth in the presence of salicylate. Further investigation will be required to determine the biochemical effects of salicylate on porin synthesis.
American Society for Microbiology