Litcius/Paper detail

Global Trends in Proteome Remodeling of the Outer Membrane Modulate Antimicrobial Permeability in Klebsiella pneumoniae

Andrea Rocker, Jake A. Lacey, Matthew J. Belousoff, Jonathan J. Wilksch, Richard A. Strugnell, Mark R. Davies, Trevor Lithgow

2020mBio79 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Klebsiella pneumoniae is a pathogen of humans with high rates of mortality and a recognized global rise in incidence of carbapenem-resistant K. pneumoniae (CRKP). The outer membrane of K. pneumoniae forms a permeability barrier that modulates the ability of antibiotics to reach their intracellular target. OmpK35, OmpK36, OmpK37, OmpK38, PhoE, and OmpK26 are porins in the outer membrane of K. pneumoniae , demonstrated here to have a causative relationship to drug resistance phenotypes in a physiological context. The data highlight that currently trialed combination treatments with a carbapenem and β-lactamase inhibitors could be effective on porin-deficient K. pneumoniae . Together with structural data, the results reveal the role of outer membrane proteome remodeling in antimicrobial resistance of K. pneumoniae and point to the role of extracellular loops, not channel parameters, in drug permeation. This significant finding warrants care in the development of phage therapies for K. pneumoniae infections, given the way porin expression will be modulated to confer phage-resistant—and collateral drug-resistant—phenotypes in K. pneumoniae .

Topics & Concepts

Klebsiella pneumoniaePorinBacterial outer membraneMicrobiologyDrug resistanceAntimicrobialContext (archaeology)BiologyAntibiotic resistanceProteomeAntibioticsEscherichia coliBioinformaticsBiochemistryGenePaleontologyAntibiotic Resistance in BacteriaAntimicrobial Resistance in StaphylococcusBacteriophages and microbial interactions