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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, April 2009, p. 1673-1678, Vol. 53, No. 4
0066-4804/09/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.01340-08
Copyright © 2009, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Mutations in Three Distinct Loci Cause Resistance to Peptide Deformylase Inhibitors in Bacillus subtilis
Yann Duroc,
Carmela Giglione, and
Thierry Meinnel*
Protein Maturation, Cell Fate and Therapeutics, ISV, UPR2355, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Bât. 23A, 1 avenue de la Terrasse, F-91198 Gif-sur-Yvette Cedex, France
Received 7 October 2008/
Returned for modification 11 December 2008/
Accepted 20 January 2009

ABSTRACT
Bacillus subtilis mutants with resistance against peptide deformylase
inhibitors were isolated. All showed a bypass of the pathway
through mutations in three genes required for formylation of
Met-tRNA
fMet,
fmt, folD, and
glyA. glyA corresponds to a yet
uncharacterized locus inducing resistance. The bypass of formylation
caused robust fitness reduction but was not accompanied by alterations
of the transcription profile. A subtle adaptation of the enzymes
of the intermediary metabolism was observed.

INTRODUCTION
In bacteria, all newly synthesized polypeptides transiently
carry a formylated N terminus (
1,
18,
33). Peptide deformylase
(PDF) catalyzes the subsequent removal of the formyl group,
and its gene is essential (
11,
22,
23). The natural compound
actinonin was the first PDF inhibitor (PDFI) characterized (
4,
6,
8). Mechanisms causing PDFI resistance involve (i) mutations
in the target gene, (ii) bypassing of the formylation pathway,
or (iii) efflux of PDFI (
4,
9,
10,
15,
17,
19,
20,
25,
31).
Bacillus subtilis has two functional PDF genes,
def and
ykrB (
14). The mechanisms of resistance have been studied only in
bacteria expressing one active PDF gene. No analysis has approached
the implications beyond the fitness cost often associated with
PDFI resistance.
To isolate variants resistant to PDFI, 100 µl of an exponential-phase B. subtilis culture was plated onto Mueller-Hinton (MH) agar supplemented with 12 µg/ml of actinonin. The plates were incubated for 2 days at 37°C, after which resistant colonies were restreaked and isolated. Cells were also plated on minimal medium (MM) agar broth (15 mM ammonium sulfate, 80 mM K2HPO4, 45 mM KH2PO4, 3.5 mM sodium citrate, 800 µM MgSO4, 0.5% [wt/vol] glucose) supplemented with tryptophan (50 mg/liter) and glycine (25 mg/liter) where indicated below. To assess the fitness cost, growth rates were measured in different broths at 37°C. Cells (106) were inoculated into 10 ml of MH medium (Fluka) or in MM without glucose and supplemented with 0.5% (wt/vol) of the indicated carbon source, and then the optical density at 600 nm was measured. In order to identify mutations in open reading frames and/or promoters, given gene loci were amplified with specific primers as shown in Table 1, and the sequences were determined.
The resistance of
B. subtilis 168 to actinonin was challenged
on MH agar at four times the MIC. The resistance rate (10
–7)
was stable, as repeated streaking on drug-free media did not
promote loss of resistance. Resistant strains grew at concentrations
much higher than four times the MIC (Table
1). Actinonin-resistant
mutants did not show any cross-resistance to other antibiotics
but were resistant to other classes of PDFI (
7). Both open reading
frame and promoter regions of genes (
def, ykrB, fmt, and
folD),
the alteration or loss of function of which causes actinonin
resistance in other bacteria, were sequenced. No mutation was
retrieved in
def and
ykrB, and 80% were located in
fmt (Table
1). Two-thirds of these mutations led to protein sequence alterations,
with large deletions due to premature stops, and promoted loss
of function of
fmt. The
fmt-114 strain featured a 114-codon
deletion. Single changes involved the catalytic mechanism or
binding of the substrates (Table
1; Fig.
1A and B).
Other mutations were located in
folD (Table
1).
folD encodes
5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate dehydrogenase/cyclohydrolase,
which produces 10-formyl-tetrahydrofolate (THF), the donor of
N-formyl to Met-tRNA
fMet. Similar mutations have been described
only for
Salmonella enterica (
24). The loss of function of
folD not only bypasses PDF function but also inactivates pathways
that use 10-formyl-THF (Fig.
2). When
folD is inactivated, the
strain cannot grow on MM. None of the resistant strains with
a
folD alteration could grow on MM, indicating that the mutations
induced loss of function. Several mutations corresponded to
deletions. The first deletion identified included residues 67
to 70, with modifications of residues 71 to 73. Structural interpretation
was based on the three-dimensional model of FolD (
29). The THF
binding site is composed of residues conserved in both humans
(
2) and
B. subtilis (Fig.
1C to E). The substitutions modify
the position of the THF binding site, leading to a dramatic
decrease in the reaction efficiency. The second deletion identified
(residues 172 to 175) is located next to the NADP binding site
165GRSNIVG
171 (
172GRSKIVG
178 in humans) (Fig.
1B to E).
There was only one strain carrying an
fmt mutation that could
not grow on MM (Table
1). Given that a nonmutated FolD protein
occurred, the origin of the impairment should be due to a mutation
upstream in the pathway. One reaction is catalyzed by the
glyA product, serine hydroxymethyltransferase (Fig.
2), which produces
glycine and 5,10-methylene-THF, the substrate of FolD. As growth
of the mutant strain on MM was restored in the presence of glycine,
this favored an involvement of
glyA. A deletion of codon 224
in
glyA was identified. According to the crystallographic model
(
32), residue 224 lies within the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP)
binding site encompassing residues Thr223 to Lys226 (Fig.
1F).
All serine hydroxymethyltransferases have five Thr residues
near the active site Lys226, which form the internal glycine-aldimine
with PLP (
3,
32). Deletion of Thr224 alters PLP binding (Fig.
1F), inactivating the enzyme. The combination of both the
glyA and
fmt mutations confers a higher resistance than that of the
strain carrying only the
fmt mutation. The MIC of actinonin
for the first strain was increased 10-fold (Table
1), indicating
that (i) the Arg116Cys substitution does not completely inactivate
fmt and (ii) GlyA modification further completes the bypass
of formylation.
All aforementioned mutations inducing PDFI resistance caused fitness costs with two- to threefold reductions in the growth rate in rich media (Table 1). This decrease was higher in MM. This finding confirms that formylation is needed for rapid growth in bacteria (5, 13, 16, 25, 28). However, the fitness cost was less pronounced than in E. coli (4, 13, 16). Strains with unambiguous inactivation of the fmt gene had distinct doubling times (Table 1). We investigated whether compensatory mechanisms could improve the growth rate by serially passaging several strains in nonselective media through 50 generations. Unlike with PDFI-resistant gram-negative bacteria (12, 21, 25), we were unable to show any improvement in the doubling time. Thus, the fitness burden induced by PDFI resistance is robust. Sequencing of the three B. subtilis tRNAfMet genes revealed no modifications or rearrangement, unlike for various gram-positive bacteria (12, 25, 30). Sequencing of the IF2 gene (infB) did not reveal any mutation, although altered expression contributes to fitness cost reduction in Pseudomonas aeruginosa (30). Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis of protein accumulation in the
fmt-114 mutant revealed patterns different from those for the wild type (WT), indicative of adaptation mechanisms associated with formylation bypass. Comparison of the transcriptome of the
fmt-114 strain with that of the WT revealed that the expression of a small number of genes was altered by more than twofold, with 308 upregulated and 25 downregulated (Fig. 3A).
To confirm the expression changes between the WT and the
fmt-114 strain, quantitative PCR experiments were performed, using
rplL for normalization (Table
2). Total RNA was isolated from 5-ml
portions of bacterial samples by using an RNeasy minikit (Qiagen)
as described by the manufacturer. Genomic DNA was eliminated
by RNase-free DNase I treatment during the isolation procedure.
cDNAs were prepared, using the SuperScript III First-Strand
system. We subjected 5 µg of total RNA to reverse transcription,
using random hexamers. The cDNA was then amplified by PCR, using
specific oligonucleotides. Real-time PCR was optimized with
a LightCycler FastStart DNA Master Sybr green kit (Roche) for
each primer pair shown in Table
3 (the amplification efficiency
was always >90%), using a standard cDNA. Each cDNA sample
was independently quantified three times, with two technical
replicates of each. Relative transcript levels were calculated
by using the relative expression software tool (REST) (
27).
Expression of the
rplL gene was used as a reference for the
determination of induction levels. No evidence for regulation
was observed for genes involved in translation. The gene categories
showing the highest changes corresponded to genes encoding functions
of the intermediary metabolism (Fig.
3A). These categories produce
the most-abundant proteins, which suggests that energetic metabolism
limits growth and is the root of the fitness cost. Thus, in
the tested conditions, (i) there is no global change of gene
expression and (ii) the adaptation mechanisms involved are subtle.
To understand whether those adaptation mechanisms could be mediated
by the growth rate and/or substrate utilization, we tested if
fitness could depend on the growth medium. Growth was performed
on either MH medium or MM. The growth rate with several carbon
sources varied from 18.6 to 53.1 min. There was no correlation
between growth rate and fitness cost, and two types of fitness
defects could be detected
(Fig.
3B). In rich medium or in MM
supplemented with a mono- or disaccharide, the doubling time
was reduced by twofold. With carboxylic acids such as pyruvate,
the growth rate was reduced fourfold. We concluded that sugar
utilization in the context of the
fmt-114 strain is more effective
than that of carboxylic acids. This difference reflects the
limited efficiency of the tricarboxylic cycle/oxidative phosphorylation
and the pentose phosphate pathway in the context of the mutant
strain, possibly compensating for the overall reduced translation
efficiency of these major proteins induced by the loss of formylation
of Met-tRNA
fMet.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Y.D. was supported by Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
(CNRS, France) and by a postdoctoral grant from the Région
Ile-de-France. This work was supported by CNRS and by grant
ANR-06-MIME-010 from the Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR,
France).

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Protein Maturation, Cell Fate and Therapeutics, ISV, UPR2355, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Bât. 23A, 1 avenue de la Terrasse, F-91198 Gif-sur-Yvette Cedex, France. Phone: 33169823612. Fax: 33169823607. E-mail:
thierry.meinnel{at}isv.cnrs-gif.fr 
Published ahead of print on 26 January 2009. 

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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, April 2009, p. 1673-1678, Vol. 53, No. 4
0066-4804/09/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.01340-08
Copyright © 2009, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.