Glucose augments killing efficiency of daptomycin challenged Staphylococcus aureus persisters

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Abstract

Treatment of Staphylococcus aureus in stationary growth phase with high doses of the antibiotic daptomycin (DAP) eradicates the vast majority of the culture and leaves persister cells behind. Despite resting in a drug-tolerant and dormant state, persister cells exhibit metabolic activity which might be exploited for their elimination. We here report that the addition of glucose to S. aureus persisters treated with DAP increased killing by up to fivefold within one hour. This glucose-DAP effect also occurred with strains less sensitive to the drug. The underlying mechanism is independent of the proton motive force and was not observed with non-metabolizable 2-deoxy-glucose. Our results are consistent with two hypotheses on the glucose-DAP interplay. The first is based upon glucose-induced carbohydrate transport proteins that may influence DAP and the second suggests that glucose may trigger the release or activity of cell-lytic proteins to augment DAP's mode of action.

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Prax, M., Mechler, L., Weidenmaier, C., & Bertram, R. (2016). Glucose augments killing efficiency of daptomycin challenged Staphylococcus aureus persisters. PLoS ONE, 11(3). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0150907

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