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Doxycycline induces Hok toxin killing in host E. coli
Author(s) -
Chinwe Uzoma Chukwudi,
Liam Good
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0235633
Subject(s) - antitoxin , doxycycline , plasmid , microbiology and biotechnology , biology , toxin , bacteria , rna , tetracycline , rna silencing , escherichia coli , antibiotics , genetics , dna , gene , rna interference
The antibacterial efficacy of the tetracycline antibiotics has been greatly reduced by the development of resistance, hence a decline in their clinical use. The hok / sok locus is a type I toxin/antitoxin plasmid stability element, often associated with multi-drug resistance plasmids, especially ESBL-encoding plasmids. It enhances host cell survivability and pathogenicity in stressful growth conditions, and increases bacterial tolerance to β-lactam antibiotics. The hok / sok locus forms dsRNA by RNA:RNA interactions between the toxin encoding mRNA and antitoxin non-coding RNA, and doxycycline has been reported to bind dsRNA structures and inhibit their cleavage/processing by the dsRNase, RNase III. This study investigated the antibacterial activities of doxycycline in hok/sok host bacteria cells, the effects on hok/sok -induced changes in growth and the mechanism(s) involved. Diverse strains of E . coli were transformed with hok/sok plasmids and assessed for doxycycline susceptibility and growth changes. The results show that the hok / sok locus increases bacterial susceptibility to doxycycline, which is more apparent in strains with more pronounced hok/sok -induced growth effects. The increased doxycycline susceptibility occurs despite β-lactam resistance imparted by hok/sok . Doxycycline was found to induce bacterial death in a manner phenotypically characteristic of Hok toxin expression, suggesting that it inhibits the toxin/antitoxin dsRNA degradation, leading to Hok toxin expression and cell death. In this way, doxycycline could counteract the multi-drug resistance plasmid maintenance/propagation, persistence and pathogenicity mechanisms associated with the hok / sok locus, which could potentially help in efforts to mitigate the rise of antimicrobial resistance.

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