Purine Nucleosides Interfere with c-di-AMP Levels and Act as Adjuvants To Re-Sensitize MRSA To β-Lactam Antibiotics

Aaron C. Nolan, Merve S. Zeden, Igor Kviatkovski, Christopher Campbell, Lucy Urwin, Rebecca M. Corrigan, Angelika Gründling, James P. O'Gara

Research output: Contribution to a Journal (Peer & Non Peer)Articlepeer-review

30 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The purine-derived signaling molecules c-di-AMP and (p)ppGpp control mecA/PBP2a-mediated β-lactam resistance in methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) raise the possibility that purine availability can control antibiotic susceptibility. Consistent with this, exogenous guanosine and xanthosine, which are fluxed through the GTP branch of purine biosynthesis, were shown to significantly reduce MRSA β-lactam resistance. In contrast, adenosine (fluxed to ATP) significantly increased oxacillin resistance, whereas inosine (which can be fluxed to ATP and GTP via hypoxanthine) only marginally increased oxacillin susceptibility. Furthermore, mutations that interfere with de novo purine synthesis (pur operon), transport (NupG, PbuG, PbuX) and the salvage pathway (DeoD2, Hpt) increased β-lactam resistance in MRSA strain JE2. Increased resistance of a nupG mutant was not significantly reversed by guanosine, indicating that NupG is required for guanosine transport, which is required to reduce β-lactam resistance. Suppressor mutants resistant to oxacillin/guanosine combinations contained several purine salvage pathway mutations, including nupG and hpt. Guanosine significantly increased cell size and reduced levels of c-di-AMP, while inactivation of GdpP, the c-di-AMP phosphodiesterase negated the impact of guanosine on β-lactam susceptibility. PBP2a expression was unaffected in nupG or deoD2 mutants, suggesting that guanosine-induced β-lactam susceptibility may result from dysfunctional c-di-AMP-dependent osmoregulation. These data reveal the therapeutic potential of purine nucleosides, as β-lactam adjuvants that interfere with the normal activation of c-di-AMP are required for high-level β-lactam resistance in MRSA.

Original languageEnglish
JournalmBio
Volume14
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2023

Keywords

  • MRSA
  • Staphylococcus aureus
  • antibiotic adjuvant
  • antibiotic resistance
  • c-di-AMP
  • purine metabolism
  • β-lactam resistance

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