| Literature DB >> 28299345 |
Tie-Shan Teng1, Ai-Ling Ji1, Xin-Ying Ji2, Yan-Zhang Li1.
Abstract
The neutrophil is the major phagocyte and the final effector cell of the innate immunity, with a primary role in the clearance of extracellular pathogens. Using the broad array of cytokines, extracellular traps, and effector molecules as the humoral arm, neutrophils play a crucial role in the host defense against pathogen infections. On the other hand, the pathogen has the capacity to overcome neutrophil-mediated host defense to establish infection causing human disease. Pathogens, such as S. aureus, have the potential to thwart neutrophil chemotaxis and phagocytosis and thereby succeed in evading killing by neutrophils. Furthermore, S. aureus surviving within neutrophils promotes neutrophil cytolysis, resulting in the release of host-derived molecules that promote local inflammation. Here, we provide a detailed overview of the mechanisms by which neutrophils kill the extracellular pathogens and how pathogens evade neutrophils degradation. This review will provide insights that might be useful for the development of novel therapies against infections caused by antibiotic resistant pathogens.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28299345 PMCID: PMC5337389 DOI: 10.1155/2017/9671604
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Figure 1Evasion of neutrophil adhesion and transmigration. (a) Mechanisms by which Staphylococcus aureus subverts neutrophil extravasation. (b) Neutrophil attack and evasion of activation.
Figure 2Staphylococcus aureus was interfered with chemotaxis and activation of complement.
Mechanism of action of neutrophil antimicrobial proteins/peptide.
| Antimicrobial protein/peptide | Direct antimicrobial mechanism | Alternative antimicrobial mechanism | Subcellular localization | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Membrane-active; inhibition of DNA, RNA, protein, bacterial cell wall synthesis | Opsonisation of bacteria/ROS formation | Primary granules, NETs | [ |
| LL-37 | Transmembrane pore-forming | ROS formation | Secondary granules, NETs | [ |
| BPI | Hydrolysis of bacterial phospholipids by binding to LPS | Inhibiting cytokine liberation by binding to CD14 | Primary granules | [ |
| Histones | Membrane-active | NETs formation | Nucleus, NETs | [ |
| Lysozyme | Degrades bacterial cell wall | NETs formation | Lysosomes | [ |
| PR3 | Proteolytic activity; degrading virulence factors | NETs formation | Primary granules/NETs | [ |
| NE | Proteolytic activity; degrading virulence factors | NETs formation | Primary granules/NETs | [ |
| CatG | Proteolytic activity | NETs formation; ROS formation | Primary granules/NETs | [ |
| NSP4 | Trypsin-like activity | Unknown | Primary granules | [ |
| Azurocidin | Membrane-active | Opsonisation of bacteria | Primary granules | [ |
| Lactoferrin | Altering bacterial growth by binding to iron; increase in membrane permeability by binding to the lipid A | Decreasing the release IL-1, IL-2, and TNF | Secondary granules/NETs | [ |
| Calprotectin | Altering bacterial growth by sequestering Mn2+ and Zn2+ | Inhibition of Mn2+-dependent bacterial superoxide defenses; NETs formation | Secondary granules | [ |
| PTX3 | As a soluble pattern recognition receptor in innate immunity | NETs formation | Secondary granules/NETs | [ |
| NADPH oxidase | Generation of superoxide anion | NETs formation | Lysosomes | [ |
| MPO | Generation of hypochlorous acid | NETs formation | Lysosomes | [ |
| Platelets | Activating neutrophils to release NETs | NETs formation | NETs | [ |
| NGAL | Inhibit bacteria growth by capturing and depleting siderophores | Acting as a growth and differentiation factor in multiple cell type | Secondary granules | [ |
Figure 3Direct antimicrobial mechanisms from neutrophils and the S. aureus counterattack. Neutrophils are equipped with multiple anti-infective strategies including the bacterial uptake (phagocytosis), the phagolysosomal degradation of bacteria via reactive oxygen species (oxidative burst), the release of antimicrobial molecules (degranulation), and the formation of a web-like structure composed of chromatin, histones, and antimicrobials (neutrophil extracellular traps, NETs). S. aureus is equipped with a magnitude of neutrophil resistance factors (green boxes) allowing the pathogen to uniquely counteract each antibacterial strategy of neutrophils.
Neutrophil antibacterial functions subverted by S. aureus. S. aureus produces a large suite of virulence factors to counteract specific neutrophil clearance mechanisms during the pathogenesis of invasive infection.
| Virulence factor | Targets | Function | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| SSL-5 | PSGL1/GPCRs | Recruitment/chemotaxis inhibition | [ |
| SSl-6 | PSGL1 | Recruitment inhibition | [ |
| SSl-11 | PSGL1 | Recruitment inhibition | [ |
| SSl-3 | TLR2 | Chemotaxis inhibition | [ |
| SEIX | PSSG1 | Recruitment inhibition | [ |
| ScpA | CXCR2 | Chemotaxis inhibition | [ |
| CHIPS | FPR1, C5aR | Chemotaxis inhibition | [ |
| FLIPr | FPR2 | Chemotaxis inhibition | [ |
| FLIPrL | FPR1, FPR2 | Chemotaxis inhibition | [ |
| PSMs | FPR2 | Chemotaxis inhibition/neutrophils lysis | [ |
| Eap | ICAM1/C4b/NE/CG/PR3 | Recruitment/phagocytic inhibition | [ |
| Aureolysin | C3 | Complement inhibition | [ |
| SCIN | C3bBb | Complement inhibition | [ |
| SCIN-B/C | C3bBb | Complement inhibition | [ |
| Efb | C3b | Complement inhibition | [ |
| Ecb | C3b | Complement inhibition | [ |
| SSL7 | IgA/C5 | Phagocytosis/complement inhibition | [ |
| SSL10 | IgG | Phagocytosis inhibition | [ |
| SAK | C3/IgG | Phagocytosis inhibition | [ |
| Sbi | IgG/C3/factor H | Phagocytosis inhibition | [ |
| SpA | IgG | Phagocytosis inhibition | [ |
| ClfA | Factor I | Phagocytosis inhibition | [ |
| SOK | Unknown | Phagocytosis inhibition | [ |
| CP | Unknown | Phagocytosis inhibition | [ |
| SdrE | Factor H | Complement inhibition | [ |
| IsdH | C3b | Complement inhibition | [ |
| Cna | C1q | Complement inhibition | [ |
| LukAB |
| Neutrophils lysis | [ |
| LukED | CCR5/CXCR1/CXCR2 | Neutrophils lysis | [ |
| LukMF | Not known | Neutrophils lysis | [ |
| PVL | C5aR | Neutrophils lysis | [ |
| Hla | C5aR | Neutrophils lysis | [ |
| Staphyloxanthin | Unknown | Resistance to ROS | [ |
| KatA | Hydrogen peroxide | Resistance to ROS | [ |
| AhpC | Hydrogen peroxide | Resistance to ROS | [ |
| Msr | Hydrogen peroxide | Resistance to ROS | [ |
| AdsA | Adenosine | Resistance to ROS | [ |
| IsdA | Fibrinogen | Resistance to lactoferrin | [ |
| OatA | Peptidoglycan | Resistance to lysozyme | [ |
| EapH1 | NSPs | Resistance to NSPs | [ |
| EapH2 | NSPs | Resistance to NSPs | [ |
| Nuclease | DNA | Resistance to NETs | [ |