In vitro assay to demonstrate high-level erythromycin resistance of a clinical isolate of Treponema pallidum

LV Stamm, JT Stapleton… - Antimicrobial agents and …, 1988 - Am Soc Microbiol
LV Stamm, JT Stapleton, PJ Bassford Jr
Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 1988Am Soc Microbiol
We have previously demonstrated that cells of Treponema pallidum freshly extracted from
infected rabbit testes can be intrinsically radiolabeled with [35 S] methionine to very high
specific activities. In this study we used the inhibition of [35 S] methionine incorporation into
trichloroacetic acid-precipitable protein in vitro as an assay to test the susceptibilities of three
different pathogenic treponemal strains to various antibiotics. In general, the results
correlated very well with the known efficacies of these antibiotics in treating human patients …
We have previously demonstrated that cells of Treponema pallidum freshly extracted from infected rabbit testes can be intrinsically radiolabeled with [35 S]methionine to very high specific activities. In this study we used the inhibition of [35 S]methionine incorporation into trichloroacetic acid-precipitable protein in vitro as an assay to test the susceptibilities of three different pathogenic treponemal strains to various antibiotics. In general, the results correlated very well with the known efficacies of these antibiotics in treating human patients with syphilis. One of the strains tested, however, a clinical isolate of T. pallidum designated street strain 14, was found to exhibit high-level resistance to erythromycin and a closely related macrolide, roxithromycin (RU 965). Street strain 14 was originally isolated from a human patient with active secondary syphilis who failed to respond to erythromycin therapy. Thus, our results indicate that an erythromycin-resistant strain of T. pallidum can be responsible for erythromycin treatment failure. In addition, street strain 14 treponemes were found to be generally less susceptible by this assay to a variety of antibiotics than were treponemes of the T. pallidum Nichols strain. These findings suggest that the outer envelope of street strain 14 treponemes may be generally less permeable to antibiotics than is that of Nichols strain treponemes.
American Society for Microbiology