Pervasive gene deregulation underlies adaptation and maladaptation in trimethoprim-resistant E. coli

mBio. 2023 Nov 30;14(6):e0211923. doi: 10.1128/mbio.02119-23. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Bacteria employ a number of mechanisms to adapt to antibiotics. Mutations in transcriptional regulators alter the expression levels of genes that can change the susceptibility of bacteria to antibiotics. Two-component signaling proteins are a major class of signaling molecule used by bacteria to regulate transcription. In previous work, we found that mutations in MgrB, a feedback regulator of the PhoQP two-component system, conferred trimethoprim tolerance to Escherichia coli. Here, we elucidate how mutations in MgrB have a domino-like effect on the gene regulatory network of E. coli. As a result, pervasive perturbation of gene regulation ensues. Depending on the environmental context, this pervasive deregulation is either adaptive or maladaptive. Our study sheds light on how deregulation of gene expression can be beneficial for bacteria when challenged with antibiotics, and why regulators like MgrB may have evolved in the first place.

Keywords: adaptive laboratory evolution; antimicrobial resistance; gene regulatory networks; negative feedback; two-component signaling.