微生物学
奈瑟菌
生物
细胞
化学
细菌
抗药性
头孢曲松
抗生素耐药性
细胞壁
抗生素
青霉素耐药性
淋病奈瑟菌
细菌蛋白
细菌细胞结构
细胞生物学
遗传学
抗性(生态学)
肽聚糖
奈瑟菌科
作者
Xin Zhang,Hong Sheng Cheng,Xueliang Zhan,Xue Li,Jiamin Huang,Haoyu Liu,Damien Chua,Guoze Wang,Xingxing Li,Yue Shi,Fuxiang Wang,Zhe Xu,Jiuxin Qu,Kévin Pethe,Guobao Li,Nguan Soon Tan,Micheál Mac Aogáin,Sanjay H. Chotirmall,Liang Li
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41467-026-68621-y
摘要
The contribution of airway pathobionts to chronic respiratory disease is increasingly recognized, yet the evolutionary processes that shift commensals to pathogens remain poorly understood. Here we investigate how antibiotic pressure drives adaptation in Neisseria subflava, a common airway commensal associated with bronchiectasis. Using serial passage under ceftriaxone exposure, we observe a >300-fold increase in resistance, accompanied by enhanced biofilm formation and genetic reprogramming. Whole-genome sequencing reveals recurrent mutations in the adhesin gene ataA, while single-cell transcriptomics identifies six functionally distinct clusters indicating adaptive programs in growth, metal homeostasis, oxidative stress, and cell-wall remodeling. Notably, biofilm integrity is maintained through compensatory upregulation of comP and bamE, which promotes phagocytic evasion and resistance in experimentally evolved strains and clinical isolates. Iron availability further stabilizes biofilm and modulates antibiotic tolerance, underscoring metal homeostasis as a contributory adaptive axis. Together, these findings reveal a multifaceted strategy by which N. subflava exploits antibiotic selection to transition towards pathogenicity. By integrating experimental evolution with single-cell resolution, we establish a framework for understanding the commensal-to-pathobiont transition, with broad implications for the airway microbiome and antimicrobial resistance in chronic respiratory disease. Pulmonary microbiotacomponents in bronchiectasis patients receive repeated antibiotic exposures, whereas previous studies on the effects ofantibiotic treatment focused on typical pathogens rather than commensals. By integrating experimental evolution withsingle-cell resolution, the authors reveal a multifaceted strategy by which Neisseria subflava, a common airwaycommensal associated with bronchiectasis, exploits antibiotic selection to transition towards pathogenicity.
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