The collaborators describe their findings on bacteria resistant
strains in the April 14 issue of Molecular Microbiology. Hoffman's
graduate student, Avery Goodman, is lead author of the paper.
Metronidazole -- a generic drug sold as Flagyl, MetroGel and Protostat
-- is prescribed for dental abscesses, certain vaginal infections
and conditions where anaerobic bacteria or protozoan parasites
are suspected. It also is the key component in combination therapies
for peptic ulcer disease. But between 10 percent and 30 percent
of H. pylori bacteria strains in the United States and Western
Europe are metronidazole-resistant. In developing countries, the
proportion may be as high as 80 percent. This resistance is the
most common reason for treatment failure, renewal of infection
and recurrence of peptic ulcers and other stomach lesions.
The
researchers discovered that metronidazole resistance results from
mutation in a gene called rdxA. This gene codes for one of the
nitroreductase enzymes that allow H. pylori to break down organic
nitrogen compounds. The enzyme also happens to convert metronidazole
to hydroxylamine, which damages DNA, proteins and other macromolecules
and kills the bacteria. So the bacteria changes a harmless chemical
into a lethal drug. When the rdxA gene is inactivated by mutation,
however, H. pylori can't break down metronidazole and therefore
it becomes one of the bacteria resistant strains.
After the Dalhousie scientists cloned and sequenced rdxA, they
and their Washington University collaborators showed that this
gene is responsible for resistance. First, the researchers found
that the bacteria E. coli, which normally is metronidazole-resistant,
became sensitive to the drug when they inserted rdxA from H. pylori
into it. Second, they made resistant H. pylori sensitive again
by adding extra copies of rdxA.
They also specifically inactivated rdxA in H. pylori simply by
inserting another marker gene into it, thereby disrupting its
DNA sequence. The H. pylori with the mutant rdxA gene became fully
metronidazole-resistant. This critical experiment showed that
rdxA alone confers metronidazole sensitivity and that its loss
of function is sufficient to cause the bacteria to be resistant.
"It was very satisfying to see that the altered strains, whose
only difference from the wild type was having this inactivated
gene, showed metronidazole resistance," says Douglas E. Berg,
Ph.D., the Alumni Professor in Molecular Microbiology and professor
of genetics at Washington University School of Medicine in St.
Louis.
Berg and research associate Dangeruta Kersulyte, Ph.D., also looked
to see whether normally sensitive H. pylori strains become etronidazole-resistant
by picking up mutant genes from bacteria resistant strains --
many bacteria donate pieces of DNA that carry resistance genes
to other strains or species. The researchers therefore examined
pairs of H. pylori isolates from patients in Peru and Lithuania,
where infection rates are very high. The two members of each pair
came from the same patient and were chosen because one was metronidazole-sensitive
while the other was resistant.
By analyzing DNA from the H. pylori chromosome, the researchers
determined whether the members of each pair differed significantly
from each other, which might suggest that resistance was due to
an extra piece of DNA, or whether they differed at just one or
two points, suggesting new mutation.
Because transferable drug resistance is so common in other bacteria
strains, they were intrigued to find that all the resistant strains
they examined had new mutations in the rdxA gene that had made
the parental strain metronidazole-sensitive.
"This
indicates that mutation is the easiest way for resistance to arise
in H. pylori," Berg says. "Our guess is that it occurs
because the bacterium converts metronidazole to hydroxylamine,
a powerful mutagen, and use of metronidazole again in later therapies
selects for these newly resistant mutant variants."
Metronidazole-resistant strains often arise in people who have
never before been treated for H. pylori infection but who may
have taken metronidazole periodically for other reasons. In many
countries, for example, the drug can be purchased very cheaply
without a prescription, and it usually is used at doses that are
insufficient to kill all the H. pylori cells a person might carry.
That person therefore would accumulate resistant strains, selected
by the drug, and sensitive strains, which would make hydroxylamine
in the stomach.
"If
I lived in a society where gastric cancer was a major problem,
the last thing I would want would be to have H. pylori delivering
mutagen to my gastric epithelial cells at the same time this bacterium
was creating a long-term inflammation that also is known to contribute
to gastric cancer," Berg says.
Goodwin A, Kersulyte D, Sisson G, Veldhuyzen van Zanten SJO, Berg
DE, Hoffman PS. Metronidazole resistance in Helicobacter pylori
is due to null mutations in a gene (rdxA) that encodes an oxygen-insensitive
NADP nitroreductase. Molecular Microbiology, 28(2), April 14,
1998.
Grants from Astra Pharm, Canada, the Canadian Medical Research
Council, the U.S. National Institutes of Health and the American
Cancer Society supported this research on bacteria resistant strains.
Note:
This story has been adapted from a news release on bacteria
resistant strains issued by Washington University School Of Medicine
for journalists and other members of the public. If you wish to
quote from any part of this story, please credit Washington University
School Of Medicine as the original source. Provided by the Science
Daily, www.sciencedaily.com.
Comment:
I am so grateful to the scientists helping us to understand
bacteria resistant strains. These bacteria resistant strains are
becoming more and more of a problem all the time. Sally Robertson
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