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J. Bacteriol., Feb 1995, 998-1007, Vol 177, No. 4
DG Thanassi, GS Suh and H Nikaido
Accumulation of tetracycline in Escherichia coli was studied to determine
its permeation pathway and to provide a basis for understanding
efflux-mediated resistance. Passage of tetracycline across the outer
membrane appeared to occur preferentially via the porin OmpF, with
tetracycline in its magnesium-bound form. Rapid efflux of
magnesium-chelated tetracycline from the periplasm was observed. In E. coli
cells that do not contain exogenous tetracycline resistance genes, the
steady-state level of tetracycline accumulation was decreased when porins
were absent or when the fraction of Mg(2+)- chelated tetracycline was
small. This is best explained by assuming the presence of a low-level
endogenous active efflux system that bypasses the outer membrane barrier.
When influx of tetracycline is slowed, this efflux is able to reduce the
accumulation of tetracycline in the cytoplasm. In contrast, we found no
evidence of a special outer membrane bypass mechanism for high-level efflux
via the Tet protein, which is an inner membrane efflux pump coded for by
exogenous tetA genes. Fractionation and equilibrium density gradient
centrifugation experiments showed that the Tet protein is not localized to
regions of inner and outer membrane adhesion. Furthermore, a high
concentration of tetracycline was found in the compartment that rapidly
equilibrated with the medium, most probably the periplasm, of
Tet-containing E. coli cells, and the level of tetracycline accumulation in
Tet-containing cells was not diminished by the mutational loss of the OmpF
porin. These results suggest that the Tet protein, in contrast to the
endogenous efflux system(s), pumps magnesium-chelated tetracycline into the
periplasm. A quantitative model of tetracycline fluxes in E. coli cells of
various types is presented.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Role of outer membrane barrier in efflux-mediated tetracycline resistance of Escherichia coli
Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley 94720-3206.
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