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Indole Facilitates Antimicrobial Uptake in Bacteria

Tong Wu, Michael J. Wilhelm, Yujie Li, Jianqiang Ma, Hai‐Lung Dai

2022ACS Infectious Diseases35 citationsDOI

Abstract

Indole signaling in bacteria plays an important role in antibiotic resistance, persistence, and tolerance. Here, we used the nonlinear optical technique, second-harmonic light scattering (SHS), to examine the influence of exogenous indole on the bacterial uptake of the antimicrobial quaternary ammonium cation (qac), malachite green. The transport rates of the antimicrobial qac across the individual membranes of Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, as well as liposomes composed of the polar lipid extract of E. coli, were directly measured using time-resolved SHS. Whereas exogenous indole was shown to induce a 2-fold increase in the transport rate of the qac across the cytoplasmic membranes of the wild-type bacteria, it had no influence on a knockout strain of E. coli lacking the tryptophan-specific transport protein (Δmtr). Likewise, indole did not affect the transport rate of the qac diffusing across the liposome membrane. Our findings suggest that indole increases the bacterial uptake of antimicrobials through an interaction with the Mtr permease.

Topics & Concepts

Indole testAntimicrobialBacteriaEscherichia coliTryptophanBiologyPseudomonas aeruginosaMicrobiologyMembraneAntimicrobial peptidesBiochemistryChemistryBiophysicsAmino acidGeneticsGeneSpectroscopy and Quantum Chemical StudiesLipid Membrane Structure and BehaviorBacteriophages and microbial interactions
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