Deciphering a novel chloramphenicols resistance mechanism: Oxidative inactivation of the propanediol pharmacophore
Abstract
Expanding knowledge about new types of antibiotic resistance genes is of great significance in dealing with the global antibiotic resistance crisis. Herein, a novel oxidoreductase capO was discovered to be responsible for oxidative inactivation of chloramphenicol and thiamphenicol. The antibiotic resistance mechanism was comprehensively deciphered using multi-omics and multiscale computational approaches. A 66,383 bp DNA fragment carrying capO was shared among four chloramphenicol-resistant strains, and the co-occurrence of capO with a mobile genetic element cluster revealed its potential mobility among different taxa. Metagenomic analysis of 772 datasets indicated that chloramphenicol was the crucial driving factor for the development and accumulation of capO in activated sludge bioreactors treating antibiotic production wastewater. Therefore, we should pay sufficient attention to its possible prevalence and transfer to pathogens, especially in some hotspot environments contaminated with high concentrations of chloramphenicols. This finding significantly expands our knowledge boundary about chloramphenicols resistance mechanisms.
- Publication:
-
Water Research
- Pub Date:
- October 2022
- DOI:
- 10.1016/j.watres.2022.119127
- Bibcode:
- 2022WatRe.22519127Z
- Keywords:
-
- Chloramphenicols;
- Antibiotic resistance gene;
- Oxidative inactivation;
- Comparative proteomics;
- Metagenomics;
- Heterologous expression