Drug resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a global problem, with major consequences for treatment and public health systems. As the emergence and spread of drug-resistant tuberculosis epidemics is largely influenced by the impact of the resistance mechanism on bacterial fitness, we wished to investigate whether compensatory evolution occurs in drug-resistant clinical isolates of M. tuberculosis. By combining information from molecular epidemiology studies of drug-resistant clinical M. tuberculosis isolates with genetic reconstructions and measurements of aminoglycoside susceptibility and fitness in Mycobacterium smegmatis, we have reconstructed a plausible pathway for how aminoglycoside resistance develops in clinical isolates of M. tuberculosis. Thus, we show by reconstruction experiments that base changes in the highly conserved A-site of 16S rRNA that: (i) cause aminoglycoside resistance, (ii) confer a high fitness cost and (iii) destabilize a stem-loop structure, are associated with a particular compensatory point mutation that restores rRNA secondary structure and bacterial fitness, while maintaining to a large extent the drug-resistant phenotype. The same types of resistance and associated mutations can be found in M. tuberculosis in clinical isolates, suggesting that compensatory evolution contributes to the spread of drug-resistant tuberculosis disease. © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Shcherbakov, D., Akbergenov, R., Matt, T., Sander, P., Andersson, D. I., & Böttger, E. C. (2010). Directed mutagenesis of mycobacterium smegmatis 16S rRNA to reconstruct the in vivo evolution of aminoglycoside resistance in mycobacterium tuberculosis. Molecular Microbiology, 77(4), 830–840. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2958.2010.07218.x
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