| Literature DB >> 24453422 |
Helen C Steel1, Riana Cockeran1, Ronald Anderson1, Charles Feldman2.
Abstract
Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) remains a leading cause of morbidity and mortality among the infectious diseases. Despite the implementation of national pneumococcal polyvalent vaccine-based immunisation strategies targeted at high-risk groups, Streptococcus pneumoniae (the pneumococcus) remains the most common cause of CAP. Notwithstanding the HIV pandemic, major challenges confronting the control of CAP include the range of bacterial and viral pathogens causing this condition, the ever-increasing problem of antibiotic resistance worldwide, and increased vulnerability associated with steadily aging populations in developed countries. These and other risk factors, as well as diagnostic strategies, are covered in the first section of this review. Thereafter, the review is focused on the pneumococcus, specifically the major virulence factors of this microbial pathogen and their role in triggering overexuberant inflammatory responses which contribute to the immunopathogenesis of invasive disease. The final section of the review is devoted to a consideration of pharmacological, anti-inflammatory strategies with adjunctive potential in the antimicrobial chemotherapy of CAP. This is focused on macrolides, corticosteroids, and statins with respect to their modes of anti-inflammatory action, current status, and limitations.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24453422 PMCID: PMC3886318 DOI: 10.1155/2013/490346
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mediators Inflamm ISSN: 0962-9351 Impact factor: 4.711
Virulence determinants of S. pneumoniae and mechanisms of subversion of host defences.
| Virulence factor | Function |
|---|---|
| Capsule | (i) Prevents entrapment in nasal mucus [ |
| (ii) Exhibits antiphagocytic activity [ | |
| (iii) Facilitates adherence and colonisation of nasopharyngeal epithelial cells [ | |
| Pili | Enhances bacterial adhesion and ability to cause invasive disease [ |
| Pilus subunit (RrgA) | (i) Binds fibronectin, collagen I, and laminin [ |
| (ii) Prevents CR3-mediated phagocytosis [ | |
| (iii) TLR2 agonist [ | |
| Biofilm | (i) Reduces susceptibility to antimicrobial agents [ |
| (ii) Prevents recognition and phagocytosis by the immune system [ | |
| H2O2 | (i) Causes ciliary slowing and epithelial damage [ |
| (ii) Facilitates colonisation of nasopharyngeal epithelial cells [ | |
| (iii) Bactericidal action against competing bacteria [ | |
| Pneumolysin | (i) Binds to cytoplasmic membrane cholesterol [ |
| (ii) Disrupts integrity of epithelial monolayer [ | |
| (iii) Exhibits cytolytic activity [ | |
| (iv) Modulates host inflammatory and immune responses [ | |
| Autolysin (LytA) | (i) Involved in autolysis resulting in the release of pneumolysin [ |
| (ii) Facilitates colonisation of nasopharyngeal epithelial cells [ | |
| Choline binding protein A (CbpA) | (i) Promotes adhesion to human cell conjugates [ |
| (ii) Binds laminin [ | |
| Choline binding protein E (CbpE) | Mediates attachment to plasminogen [ |
| Pneumococcal surface protein A (PspA) | (i) Inhibits complement-dependent phagocytosis [ |
| (ii) Binds lactoferrin [ | |
| Pneumococcal surface protein C (PspC) | Inhibits deposition of the terminal complement complex [ |
| Pneumococcal adherence and virulence factor A (PavA) | Mediates attachment to plasminogen [ |
| Pneumococcal adherence and virulence factor B (PavB) | Mediates attachment to plasminogen and fibronectin [ |
| Pneumococcal surface adhesin A (PsaA) | (i) Binds E-cadherin [ |
| (ii) Facilitates invasion of nasopharyngeal epithelial cells [ | |
| Plasmin and fibronectin binding protein A (PfbA) | Mediates attachment to plasminogen and fibronectin [ |
| Pneumococcal serine-rich repeat protein (PsrP) | (i) Facilitates adherence to nasopharyngeal epithelial cells [ |
| (ii) Mediates biofilm production [ | |
| Putative histidine triad protein (PhpA) | Degrades C3 [ |
| Neuraminidase (sialidase) | (i) Facilitates adherence and colonisation of nasopharyngeal epithelial cells [ |
| (ii) Mediates biofilm production [ | |
| Hyaluronidase | (i) Facilitates colonisation of nasopharyngeal epithelial cells [ |
| (ii) Aids the dissemination of the bacteria [ | |
| Endonuclease A (EndA) | Degrades neutrophil extracellular traps [ |
| Zinc metalloproteinase (ZmpB) | (i) Induces TNF production in the respiratory tract [ |
| (ii) Cleaves secretory IgA [ | |
| Streptococcus-specific glycosyl hydrolase (GHIP) | Facilitates invasion of nasopharyngeal epithelial cells [ |
| ClpP protease | Induces apoptosis [ |
| Ser/Thr kinase (StkP) | Regulator of cell division [ |
Causes of overexuberant inflammatory responses during pneumococcal CAP.
| Cause | Consequence |
|---|---|
| Excessive release of pneumolysin | Uncontrolled complement activation; hyperactivation of phagocytes and epithelial cells due to the noncytolytic, pore-forming actions of the toxin |
| Excessive release of bacterial cell-wall products (e.g., lipoteichoic acids and DNA), especially during chemotherapy with bactericidal agents | Sustained activation of various types of pathogen recognition receptors on/in cells of the innate immune system and epithelial cells, resulting in poorly regulated production of neutrophil-mobilising chemokines/cytokines |
| Poorly controlled formation of NETs with limited protective activity | Histone-mediated epithelial and endothelial toxicity, favouring extrapulmonary spread of the pneumococcus |
| Excessive release of cell-permeable, proinflammatory H2O2 by the pneumococcus | Uncontrolled activation of redox intracellular signalling mechanisms in cells of the innate and adaptive immune systems, as well as other cell types. The existence of this mechanism remains to be established |
Adjunctive anti-inflammatory therapies in CAP.
| Type of adjunctive therapy | Current status |
|---|---|
| Macrolide antibiotics | Recommended in current guidelines primarily for antimicrobial activity. The clinical relevance of anti-inflammatory activity remains to be conclusively established |
| Corticosteroids | Remains controversial and is the subject of several ongoing randomised, prospective, controlled trials |
| Statins | Show promise, but therapeutic efficacy of initiation at the time of diagnosis of CAP remains to be established |
| cAMP-elevatory agents | Theoretically promising, although few safe and effective agents currently available; salbutamol found ineffective in the treatment of ALI |
| NSAIDs | Of questionable value |