精品国产一区二区桃色

Journal News

How a fish pathogen outwits antibiotic stress

Sneha Das
Jan. 3, 2023

Antibiotic resistance occurs when medications for prevention and treatment of bacterial infections in humans and other animals no longer work. Xiangmin Lin’s research group at the in China has worked on bacterial antibiotic resistance for many years, and their on the discovery of this novel mechanism was published in the journal Molecular & Cellular Proteomics.

Aeromonas hydrophila colonies growing on the blood agar. Colonies shown with reflected light.
/Wikimedia Commons
Aeromonas hydrophila colonies growing on the blood agar. Colonies shown with reflected light.

More than 2.8 million antibiotic-resistant infections result in over 35,000 deaths each year in the U.S. alone, according to a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention , and these numbers are much higher globally. If nothing changes, 10 million people will die from drug-resistant infections every year worldwide, , by 2050.

Lishan Zhang, a Ph.D. student in Lin’s lab and first author of the 精品国产一区二区桃色 paper, said antibiotic resistance is a serious public health problem, and drug-resistant bacteria are found in settings ranging from hospitals to livestock breeding centers and aquaculture.

Fisheries around the world due to antibiotic-resistant bacterial pathogens such as A. hydrophila, which is fatal to freshwater fish.

Resistant bacteria use mechanisms such as changing an antibiotic’s target, destroying or modifying the drug, preventing its entry, or even pumping it out of the cell. Several of these mechanisms are well documented, Zhang said, but very few researchers have studied the role of protein lysine acetylation, or Kac, in antibiotic resistance.

Posttranslational modifications, or PTMs, are reversible enzymatic changes made in a protein after its synthesis. Kac modifications are a common type of PTM where an acetyl group can be reversibly added to or removed from lysine residues in a protein. In bacteria, quorum sensing, chemotaxis, metabolism and virulence pathways are known to use Kac modifications, but little was known about their role in antibiotic resistance before this study.

“We discovered a new and complex mechanism of bacterial drug resistance,” Zhang said. “The most exciting aspect is that (Kac modifications) are reversible and dynamic, and bacteria can easily switch their ‘on’ or ‘off’ state to adapt to antibiotic stress instantaneously.”

Using quantitative proteomics, Lin’s group found that  A. hydrophila that is resistant to the antibiotic oxytetracycline has less Aha1 — an outer membrane protein that belongs to the Gram-negative porin family. Three lysine residues located at the extracellular pore vestibule and their acetylation status regulate antibiotic uptake by changing Aha1’s pore size. The Kac status and consequent pore size of Aha1 affects multidrug resistance to the tetracycline and beta-lactam classes of antibiotics.

Most studies of antibiotic resistance focus on identifying the gene or the protein, Zhang said, but posttranslational modifications add another layer of complexity. The Lin group will continue their research to better understand how the acetylation state of Aha1 is regulated and use what they call “special Kac-sites” on Aha1 to develop better diagnostic and therapeutic tools in future.

“Great attention should be paid to the effect of posttranslational modification on antibiotic resistance,” Zhang said. “These modifications may be a new target for the development of drugs.”

Enjoy reading ASBMB Today?

Become a member to receive the print edition four times a year and the digital edition monthly.

Learn more
Sneha Das

Sneha Das is a research development manager at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign and an ASBMB Today volunteer contributing writer.

Get the latest from ASBMB Today

Enter your email address, and we鈥檒l send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.

Latest in Science

Science highlights or most popular articles

Understanding the roles of extracellular matrix and vesicles in valvular disease
Profile

Understanding the roles of extracellular matrix and vesicles in valvular disease

Oct. 30, 2025

MOSAIC scholar Cassandra Clift uses mass spectrometry and multiomics to study cardiovascular calcification and collagen dysregulation, bridging her background in bioengineering and biology to investigate extracellular vesicles and heart disease.

Lipid profiles reveal sex differences in type 2 diabetes
Journal News

Lipid profiles reveal sex differences in type 2 diabetes

Oct. 29, 2025

Researchers explored the lipid profiles of individuals with type 2 diabetes and identified potentially useful lipid biomarkers for this condition.

Serum lipids may predict early diabetes risk
Journal News

Serum lipids may predict early diabetes risk

Oct. 29, 2025

Researchers found that levels of two key fatty acids may predict worsening tolerance for glucose, independent of body fat and insulin levels. In turn, these fatty acids may serve as early T2D biomarkers.

Sex and diet shape fat tissue lipid profiles in obesity
Journal News

Sex and diet shape fat tissue lipid profiles in obesity

Oct. 29, 2025

Researchers found that sex hormone levels and diet both influence inflammation and lipid composition in obesity.

Mapping the placenta鈥檚 hormone network
Journal News

Mapping the placenta鈥檚 hormone network

Oct. 21, 2025

Study uncovers how the placenta actively metabolizes not only glucocorticoids but also novel androgens and progesterones, reshaping our understanding of pregnancy and its complications.

Biochemists and molecular biologists sweep major 2025 honors
News

Biochemists and molecular biologists sweep major 2025 honors

Oct. 20, 2025

Recent Nobel, MacArthur and Kimberly Prize honorees highlight the power of biochemistry and molecular biology to drive discovery, including immune tolerance, vaccine design and metabolic disease, and to advance medicine and improve human health.