Frontiers
Browse
Image_1_Taxonomic Distribution of FosB in Human-Microbiota and Activity Comparison of Fosfomycin Resistance.TIF (2.94 MB)

Image_1_Taxonomic Distribution of FosB in Human-Microbiota and Activity Comparison of Fosfomycin Resistance.TIF

Download (2.94 MB)
figure
posted on 2019-02-13, 04:27 authored by Ziwei Song, Xue Wang, Xingchen Zhou, Su Jiang, Yuanyuan Li, Owais Ahmad, Lianwen Qi, Ping Li, Jing Li

FosB, a Mg2+ dependent thioltransferase, confers antibiotic resistance to fosfomycin through enzymatic drug inactivation. Among all antibiotic resistant proteins in the Antibiotic Resistance Genes Database and the Comprehensive Antibiotic Resistance Database, FosB is within 5% of the most number of ARPs identified in Human Microbiome Project reference database but mainly distributed in limited genera, i.e., 122 of total 133 FosB homologues are found from Bacillus and Staphylococcus. Furthermore, these FosB sequences could be divided into three clusters based on their phylogenetic relationship, i.e., two groups of FosB were mainly from Bacillus, and another was mainly from Staphylococcus. Finally, we confirmed that FosB from the group of Staphylococcus presented the highest resistance ability to fosfomycin by in silico and in vitro comparisons. In summary, this study elaborates the specific taxonomic characteristics and resistant abilities of FosB in human microbiota, which might help in developing more promising fosfomycin-like antibiotics.

History

Usage metrics

    Frontiers in Microbiology

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC