Background: Persistence represents a critical evolutionary reservoir for the development of antimicrobial resistance in Acinetobacter baumannii (Ab). Understanding the basal mechanisms that enable this survival strategy is crucial for elucidating how high-risk clones evolve resistance during therapy. Methods: High-dose colistin time-kill assays were performed in ten ST2 clinical colistin-susceptible (COL-S) Carbapenem-Resistant Ab (CRAB) developing in vivo stable and full-colistin resistance to detect persisters. Genomics and basal transcriptomics of chromosomal/plasmid toxin–antitoxin systems (T/As) were performed, as duplicates for each sample, in two ST2 COL-S CRAB to investigate the genomics and basal T/A transcriptomic backgrounds. Results: Phenotypically, all strains showed a persistent subpopulation (~1% survival at 8 h) under 5× COL MIC exposure. Genomics identified 10 type-II and one type-IV T/A systems. Basal transcriptomics revealed active expression patterns mainly of GNAT superfamily T/A systems, with consistently low toxin mRNA levels associated with toxin- or antitoxin-directed asRNAs in chromosomal modules. This architecture defined new dual-combined regulatory models in which asRNAs acted as primary T/A mRNA balance modulators, putatively impacting on the T/A mRNA ratio. Conversely, the plasmid-encoded BrnT/A module showed a highly balanced expression. Conclusions: Our findings revealed, for the first time, the role of the type-II GNAT T/A superfamily as putative molecular switchers via a fine-tuning transcript balance regulation, impacting the transition from a metabolically active cell state to a dormant one in developing colistin persistence and in vivo resistance CRAB.

Deciphering the Emergence of Biofilm-Independent Colistin Persistence and Resistance in A. baumannii: Toxin–Antitoxin Omics and Novel T/A mRNA-asRNA Balance Regulatory Models

Eleonora Chines
Membro del Collaboration Group
;
Gaia Vertillo Aluisio
Membro del Collaboration Group
;
Maria Lina Mezzatesta
Membro del Collaboration Group
;
Viviana Cafiso
Membro del Collaboration Group
2026-01-01

Abstract

Background: Persistence represents a critical evolutionary reservoir for the development of antimicrobial resistance in Acinetobacter baumannii (Ab). Understanding the basal mechanisms that enable this survival strategy is crucial for elucidating how high-risk clones evolve resistance during therapy. Methods: High-dose colistin time-kill assays were performed in ten ST2 clinical colistin-susceptible (COL-S) Carbapenem-Resistant Ab (CRAB) developing in vivo stable and full-colistin resistance to detect persisters. Genomics and basal transcriptomics of chromosomal/plasmid toxin–antitoxin systems (T/As) were performed, as duplicates for each sample, in two ST2 COL-S CRAB to investigate the genomics and basal T/A transcriptomic backgrounds. Results: Phenotypically, all strains showed a persistent subpopulation (~1% survival at 8 h) under 5× COL MIC exposure. Genomics identified 10 type-II and one type-IV T/A systems. Basal transcriptomics revealed active expression patterns mainly of GNAT superfamily T/A systems, with consistently low toxin mRNA levels associated with toxin- or antitoxin-directed asRNAs in chromosomal modules. This architecture defined new dual-combined regulatory models in which asRNAs acted as primary T/A mRNA balance modulators, putatively impacting on the T/A mRNA ratio. Conversely, the plasmid-encoded BrnT/A module showed a highly balanced expression. Conclusions: Our findings revealed, for the first time, the role of the type-II GNAT T/A superfamily as putative molecular switchers via a fine-tuning transcript balance regulation, impacting the transition from a metabolically active cell state to a dormant one in developing colistin persistence and in vivo resistance CRAB.
2026
persistence; dormancy; CRAB; T/A systems; genomics; transcriptomic profiling; col resistance
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11769/710449
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