Prophages and Growth Dynamics Confound Experimental Results with Antibiotic-Tolerant Persister Cells


Date

2017-12

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

no

Citations

Altmetric

Data

Abstract

Bacterial persisters are phenotypic variants that survive antibiotic treatment in a dormant state and can be formed by multiple pathways. We recently proposed that the second messenger (p)ppGpp drives Escherichia coli persister formation through protease Lon and activation of toxin-antitoxin (TA) modules. This model found considerable support among researchers studying persisters but also generated controversy as part of recent debates in the field. In this study, we therefore used our previous work as a model to critically examine common experimental procedures to understand and overcome the inconsistencies often observed between results of different laboratories. Our results show that seemingly simple antibiotic killing assays are very sensitive to variations in culture conditions and bacterial growth phase. Additionally, we found that some assay conditions cause the killing of antibiotic-tolerant persisters via induction of cryptic prophages. Similarly, the inadvertent infection of mutant strains with bacteriophage ϕ80, a notorious laboratory contaminant, apparently caused several of the phenotypes that we reported in our previous studies. We therefore reconstructed all infected mutants and probed the validity of our model of persister formation in a refined assay setup that uses robust culture conditions and unravels the dynamics of persister cells through all bacterial growth stages. Our results confirm the importance of (p)ppGpp and Lon but no longer support a role of TA modules in E. coli persister formation under unstressed conditions. We anticipate that the results and approaches reported in our study will lay the ground for future work in the field.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Journal / series

Volume

8 (6)

Pages / Article No.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

(p)ppGpp; Antibiotic tolerance; Acteriophage genetics; Persistence; Toxin-antitoxin modules

Organisational unit

09807 - Harms, Alexander / Harms, Alexande

Notes

Funding

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