Abstract:
Acinetobacter baumannii is one of the major causes of hospital acquired infections all over the
world and one the most frequently isolated nosocomial pathogen in India. This Gram-negative
coccobacillus causes a myriad of diseases like hospital acquired pneumonia, meningitis,
bacteraemia, urinary tract infections, wound infections and other soft tissue infections. However,
the bacterium has gained worldwide notoriety for rapidly developing resistance to most of the
antimicrobials and global dissemination of pan-drug resistant strains. Much of the information
on determinants of antimicrobial resistance, virulence factors and survival strategies of this
bacterium has poured in recently which includes our foray into identification of small RNA in
this highly successful nosocomial pathogen.
Small RNAs are short non-coding regulatory RNA molecules that interact with their target
mRNAs in antisense manner, thereby affecting their translation, and adding an extra posttranscriptional
layer to the overall gene regulation scheme in bacteria. This sRNA-mRNA
interaction is often assisted by chaperone proteins, of which Hfq is a major player throughout the
Gram-negative genera. We identified 31 putative sRNA in A. baumannii and characterized a
novel sRNA, AbsR25, in our previous study. This subsequently led to the identification of Hfq
protein in A. baumannii. The A. baumannii Hfq is unusually long due to an unstructured Cterminal
extension. Our experiments prove that this seemingly unimportant part is required for
efficient sRNA interaction and plays a significant role in maintaining the phenotype that is
dependent on the presence of functional Hfq.
In an earlier endeavor of our research group, AbsR25 was identified as a novel sRNA that
regulates the expression of efflux pump genes including A1S_1331. Such efflux pumps are
determinants of antibiotic resistance and A1S_1331, rechristened as AbaF, was indeed found in
this study to be responsible for intrinsic fosfomycin resistance in A. baumannii. Apart from
antibiotic efflux, AbaF was also determined to be involved in extruding biofilm material and
important for virulence of A. baumannii.
From the aforementioned 31 candidate sRNA, AbsR1, a novel small RNA was validated by
Northern blotting in the present work. This 89 nt long sRNA is present in the intergenic region
between 50S ribosome subunit coding genes and conserved throughout the A. baumannii strains.
The over expression of AbsR1 at acidic challenge and decreased viability of A. baumannii
ΔAbsR1 cells in acidic conditions indicates that AbsR1 might be involved in regulation of cellular
response to acidic stress.
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From the same list of candidate sRNAs, AbsR10 coding region was identified to be exclusive to
A. baumannii. PCR primers designed to amplify this unique target region could identify all the
clinical strains present in the lab with 100% accuracy. Moreover, the detection was specific as
no amplification was achieved when the template DNA from other Gram negative and Grampositive
pathogens was used. The PCR based detection system was shown to rapidly detect A.
baumannii from simulated clinical surfaces without any enrichment. Quantitative detection of A.
baumannii could also be made using qPCR, which also led to enhancement in the sensitivity of
the detection system.