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Dive into the research topics where Amy Spoering is active.

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Featured researches published by Amy Spoering.


Nature | 2015

A new antibiotic kills pathogens without detectable resistance

Losee L. Ling; Tanja Schneider; Aaron J. Peoples; Amy Spoering; Ina Engels; Brian P. Conlon; Anna Mueller; Till F. Schäberle; Dallas Hughes; Slava S. Epstein; M. Jones; Linos Lazarides; Victoria Alexandra Steadman; Douglas R. Cohen; Cintia R. Felix; K. Ashley Fetterman; William P. Millett; Anthony Nitti; Ashley M. Zullo; Chao Chen

Antibiotic resistance is spreading faster than the introduction of new compounds into clinical practice, causing a public health crisis. Most antibiotics were produced by screening soil microorganisms, but this limited resource of cultivable bacteria was overmined by the 1960s. Synthetic approaches to produce antibiotics have been unable to replace this platform. Uncultured bacteria make up approximately 99% of all species in external environments, and are an untapped source of new antibiotics. We developed several methods to grow uncultured organisms by cultivation in situ or by using specific growth factors. Here we report a new antibiotic that we term teixobactin, discovered in a screen of uncultured bacteria. Teixobactin inhibits cell wall synthesis by binding to a highly conserved motif of lipid II (precursor of peptidoglycan) and lipid III (precursor of cell wall teichoic acid). We did not obtain any mutants of Staphylococcus aureus or Mycobacterium tuberculosis resistant to teixobactin. The properties of this compound suggest a path towards developing antibiotics that are likely to avoid development of resistance.


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2004

Persister cells and tolerance to antimicrobials.

Iris Keren; Niilo Kaldalu; Amy Spoering; Yipeng Wang

Bacterial populations produce persister cells that neither grow nor die in the presence of microbicidal antibiotics. Persisters are largely responsible for high levels of biofilm tolerance to antimicrobials, but virtually nothing was known about their biology. Tolerance of Escherichia coli to ampicillin and ofloxacin was tested at different growth stages to gain insight into the nature of persisters. The number of persisters did not change in lag or early exponential phase, and increased dramatically in mid-exponential phase. Similar dynamics were observed with Pseudomonas aeruginosa (ofloxacin) and Staphylococcus aureus (ciprofloxacin and penicillin). This shows that production of persisters depends on growth stage. Maintaining a culture of E. coli at early exponential phase by reinoculation eliminated persisters. This suggests that persisters are not at a particular stage in the cell cycle, neither are they defective cells nor cells created in response to antibiotics. Our data indicate that persisters are specialized survivor cells.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2001

Biofilms and Planktonic Cells of Pseudomonas aeruginosa Have Similar Resistance to Killing by Antimicrobials

Amy Spoering

Biofilms are considered to be highly resistant to antimicrobial agents. Strictly speaking, this is not the case-biofilms do not grow in the presence of antimicrobials any better than do planktonic cells. Biofilms are indeed highly resistant to killing by bactericidal antimicrobials, compared to logarithmic-phase planktonic cells, and therefore exhibit tolerance. It is assumed that biofilms are also significantly more tolerant than stationary-phase planktonic cells. A detailed comparative examination of tolerance of biofilms versus stationary- and logarithmic-phase planktonic cells with four different antimicrobial agents was performed in this study. Carbenicillin appeared to be completely ineffective against both stationary-phase cells and biofilms. Killing by this beta-lactam antibiotic depends on rapid growth, and this result confirms the notion of slow-growing biofilms resembling the stationary state. Ofloxacin is a fluoroquinolone antibiotic that kills nongrowing cells, and biofilms and stationary-phase cells were comparably tolerant to this antibiotic. The majority of cells in both populations were eradicated at low levels of ofloxacin, leaving a fraction of essentially invulnerable persisters. The bulk of the population in both biofilm and stationary-phase cultures was tolerant to tobramycin. At very high tobramycin concentrations, a fraction of persister cells became apparent in stationary-phase culture. Stationary-phase cells were more tolerant to the biocide peracetic acid than were biofilms. In general, stationary-phase cells were somewhat more tolerant than biofilms in all of the cases examined. We concluded that, at least for Pseudomonas aeruginosa, one of the model organisms for biofilm studies, the notion that biofilms have greater resistance than do planktonic cells is unwarranted. We further suggest that tolerance to antibiotics in stationary-phase or biofilm cultures is largely dependent on the presence of persister cells.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2006

GlpD and PlsB Participate in Persister Cell Formation in Escherichia coli

Amy Spoering; Marin Vulić

Bacterial populations produce dormant persister cells that are resistant to killing by all antibiotics currently in use, a phenomenon known as multidrug tolerance (MDT). Persisters are phenotypic variants of the wild type and are largely responsible for MDT of biofilms and stationary populations. We recently showed that a hipBA toxin/antitoxin locus is part of the MDT mechanism in Escherichia coli. In an effort to find additional MDT genes, an E. coli expression library was selected for increased survival to ampicillin. A clone with increased persister production was isolated and was found to overexpress the gene for the conserved aerobic sn-glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase GlpD. The GlpD overexpression strain showed increased tolerance to ampicillin and ofloxacin, while a strain with glpD deleted had a decreased level of persisters in the stationary state. This suggests that GlpD is a component of the MDT mechanism. Further genetic studies of mutants affected in pathways involved in sn-glycerol-3-phosphate metabolism have led to the identification of two additional multidrug tolerance loci, glpABC, the anaerobic sn-glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, and plsB, an sn-glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase.


Nature | 2015

Erratum: A new antibiotic kills pathogens without detectable resistance

Losee L. Ling; Tanja Schneider; Aaron J. Peoples; Amy Spoering; Ina Engels; Brian P. Conlon; Anna Mueller; Till F. Schäberle; Dallas Hughes; Slava S. Epstein; M. Jones; Linos Lazarides; Victoria Alexandra Steadman; Douglas R. Cohen; Cintia R. Felix; K. Ashley Fetterman; William P. Millett; Anthony Nitti; Ashley M. Zullo; Chao Chen

This corrects the article DOI: 10.1038/nature14098


Archive | 2005

Persisters: Specialized Cells Responsible for Biofilm Tolerance to Antimicrobial Agents

Iris Keren; Niilo Kaldalu; Kim Lewis; Devang Shah; Amy Spoering


Nature Protocols | 2017

In situ cultivation of previously uncultivable microorganisms using the ichip

Brittany Berdy; Amy Spoering; Losee L. Ling; Slava S. Epstein


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2004

Corrigendum to: “Persister cells and tolerance to antimicrobials” [FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 230 (2003) 12–18]

Iris Keren; Niilo Kaldalu; Amy Spoering; Yipeng Wang


Archive | 2017

NOVEL MACROCYCLIC ANTIBIOTICS AND USES THEREOF

Dallas Hughes; Ling, Losee, Lucy; Anthony Nitti; Peoples, Aaron, J.; Amy Spoering


Archive | 2015

DEPSIPEPTIDO Y SUS USOS

Amy Spoering; Victoria Alexandra Steadman; Jean Chiva; Linos Lazarides; Michael Kenyon Jones; Karine G. Poullennec; Kim Lewis; Aaron J. Peoples; Dallas Hughes; Losee Lucy Ling; William P. Millett; Anthony Nitti

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Iris Keren

Northeastern University

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Chao Chen

Northeastern University

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Yipeng Wang

Northeastern University

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M. Jones

University of Liverpool

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