L-Arabinose Alters the E. coli Transcriptome to Favor Biofilm Growth and Enhances Survival During Fluoroquinolone Stress
Abstract
Environmental conditions, including nutrient composition and temperature, influence biofilm formation and antibiotic resistance in Escherichia coli. Understanding how specific metabolites modulate these processes is critical for improving antimicrobial strategies. Here, we investigated the growth and composition of Escherichia coli in both planktonic and biofilm states in the presence of L-arabinose, with and without exposure to the fluoroquinolone antibiotic levofloxacin, at two temperatures: 28 and 37 °C. At both temperatures, L-arabinose increased the growth rate of planktonic E. coli but resulted in reduced total growth; concurrently, it enhanced biofilm growth at 37 °C. L-arabinose reduced the efficacy of levofloxacin and promoted growth in sub-minimum inhibitory concentrations (25 ng/mL). Transcriptomic analyses provided insight into the molecular basis of arabinose-mediated reduced susceptibility of E. coli to levofloxacin. We found that L-arabinose had a temperature- and state-dependent impact on the transcriptome. Using gene ontology overrepresentation analyses, we found that L-arabinose modulated the expression of many critical antibiotic resistance genes, including efflux pumps (ydeA, mdtH,mdtM), transporters (proVWX), and biofilm-related genes for external structures like pili (fimA) and curli (csgA,csgB). This study demonstrates a previously uncharacterized role for L-arabinose in modulating antibiotic resistance and biofilm-associated gene expression in E. coli and provides a foundation for additional exploration of sugar-mediated antibiotic sensitivity in bacterial biofilms.
Repository Citation
Austin, Katherine M., Jenna K. Frizzell, Audrey A. Neighmond, et al. 2025. "L-Arabinose Alters the E. coli Transcriptome to Favor Biofilm Growth and Enhances Survival During Fluoroquinolone Stress." Microorganisms 13(7): 1665.
Publisher
MDPI
Publication Date
7-15-2025
Publication Title
Microorganisms
Additional Department
Chemistry and Biochemistry
Document Type
Article
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms13071665
Keywords
Biofilm, E. coli, Fluoroquinolone, Transcriptomics
Language
English
Format
text
