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Versatility of Stenotrophomonas maltophilia: Ecological roles of RND efflux pumps

Heliyon 2023 22 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Amandine Chauviat, Thibault De Meyer, Sabine Favre‐Bonté

Summary

Researchers reviewed the ecological roles of molecular pumps in Stenotrophomonas maltophilia, a widespread environmental bacterium, finding these pumps help the microbe adapt to diverse habitats — not just resist antibiotics as previously assumed. Understanding these pumps' broader functions in soil, water, and plant environments could inform strategies to manage antibiotic resistance and understand how bacteria colonize multiple niches.

<i>S. maltophilia</i> is a widely distributed bacterium found in natural, anthropized and clinical environments. The genome of this opportunistic pathogen of environmental origin includes a large number of genes encoding RND efflux pumps independently of the clinical or environmental origin of the strains. These pumps have been historically associated with the uptake of antibiotics and clinically relevant molecules because they confer resistance to many antibiotics. However, considering the environmental origin of <i>S. maltophilia</i>, the ecological role of these pumps needs to be clarified. RND efflux systems are highly conserved within bacteria and encountered both in pathogenic and non-pathogenic species. Moreover, their evolutionary origin, conservation and multiple copies in bacterial genomes suggest a primordial role in cellular functions and environmental adaptation. This review is aimed at elucidating the ecological role of <i>S. maltophilia</i> RND efflux pumps in the environmental context and providing an exhaustive description of the environmental niches of <i>S. maltophilia</i>. By looking at the substrates and functions of the pumps, we propose different involvements and roles according to the adaptation of the bacterium to various niches. We highlight that i°) regulatory mechanisms and inducer molecules help to understand the conditions leading to their expression, and ii°) association and functional redundancy of RND pumps and other efflux systems demonstrate their complex role within <i>S. maltophilia</i> cells. These observations emphasize that RND efflux pumps play a role in the versatility of <i>S. maltophilia.</i>

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