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Anti-persister efficacy of colistin and meropenem against uropathogenic Escherichia coli is dependent on environmental conditions

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posted on 2025-07-01, 00:16 authored by J Urbaniec, M Getino, TBD McEwan, Martina Sanderson-SmithMartina Sanderson-Smith, J McFadden, Faisal HaiFaisal Hai, RL Ragione, MM Hassan, S Hingley-Wilson

Antibiotic persistence is a phenomenon observed when genetically susceptible cells survive long-term exposure to antibiotics. These ‘persisters’ are an intrinsic component of bacterial populations and stem from phenotypic heterogeneity. Persistence to antibiotics is a concern for public health globally, as it increases treatment duration and can contribute to treatment failure. Furthermore, there is a growing array of evidence that persistence is a ‘stepping-stone’ for the development of genetic antimicrobial resistance. Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are a major contributor to antibiotic consumption worldwide, and are known to be both persistent (i.e. affecting the host for a prolonged period) and recurring. Currently, in clinical settings, routine laboratory screening of pathogenic isolates does not determine the presence or the frequency of persister cells. Furthermore, the majority of research undertaken on antibiotic persistence has been done on lab-adapted bacterial strains. In the study presented here, we characterized antibiotic persisters in a panel of clinical uropathogenic Escherichia coli isolates collected from hospitals in the UK and Australia. We found that a urine-pH mimicking environment not only induces higher levels of antibiotic persistence to meropenem and colistin than standard laboratory growth conditions, but also results in rapid development of transient colistin resistance, regardless of the genetic resistance profile of the isolate. Furthermore, we provide evidence for the presence of multiple virulence factors involved in stress resistance and biofilm formation in the genomes of these isolates, whose activities have been previously shown to contribute to the formation of persister cells.

Funding

Characterising a novel toxin regulatory mechanism from the new hypervirulent Streptococcal pyogenes M1uk lineage in Australia : National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) | 2019767

Blood group antigen recognition by Group A Streptococcus mediates host colonisation : National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) | APP1143266

Equipment Funding : National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) | GNT9000631

History

Journal title

Microbiology United Kingdom

Volume

169

Issue

11

Article/chapter number

ARTN 001403

Total pages

10

Publisher

MICROBIOLOGY SOC

Location

England

Publication status

  • Published

Language

English

Associated Identifiers

grant.8857400 (dimensions-grant-id)