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  4. Revealing Antibiotic Tolerance of the Mycobacterium smegmatis Xanthine/Uracil Permease Mutant Using Microfluidics and Single-Cell Analysis
 
research article

Revealing Antibiotic Tolerance of the Mycobacterium smegmatis Xanthine/Uracil Permease Mutant Using Microfluidics and Single-Cell Analysis

Elitas, Meltem  
•
Dhar, Neeraj  
•
McKinney, John D.  
July 1, 2021
Antibiotics-Basel

To reveal rare phenotypes in bacterial populations, conventional microbiology tools should be advanced to generate rapid, quantitative, accurate, and high-throughput data. The main drawbacks of widely used traditional methods for antibiotic studies include low sampling rate and averaging data for population measurements. To overcome these limitations, microfluidic-microscopy systems have great promise to produce quantitative single-cell data with high sampling rates. Using Mycobacterium smegmatis cells, we applied both conventional assays and a microfluidic-microscopy method to reveal the antibiotic tolerance mechanisms of wild-type and msm2570::Tn mutant cells. Our results revealed that the enhanced antibiotic tolerance mechanism of the msm2570::Tn mutant was due to the low number of lysed cells during the antibiotic exposure compared to wild-type cells. This is the first study to characterize the antibiotic tolerance phenotype of the msm2570::Tn mutant, which has a transposon insertion in the msm2570 gene-encoding a putative xanthine/uracil permease, which functions in the uptake of nitrogen compounds during nitrogen limitation. The experimental results indicate that the msm2570::Tn mutant can be further interrogated to reveal antibiotic killing mechanisms, in particular, antibiotics that target cell wall integrity.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.3390/antibiotics10070794
Web of Science ID

WOS:000686146600001

Author(s)
Elitas, Meltem  
Dhar, Neeraj  
McKinney, John D.  
Date Issued

2021-07-01

Publisher

MDPI

Published in
Antibiotics-Basel
Volume

10

Issue

7

Start page

794

Subjects

Infectious Diseases

•

Pharmacology & Pharmacy

•

antibiotics

•

conventional

•

microbiology

•

microfluidics

•

microscopy

•

mycobacterium smegmatis

•

population

•

single cell

•

antituberculosis drugs

•

persistence

•

mechanisms

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
UPKIN  
Available on Infoscience
August 28, 2021
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/180895
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