| Literature DB >> 30271756 |
Hartmut Stoll1, Michael Ost1, Anurag Singh1, Roman Mehling1, Davide Neri1, Iris Schäfer1, Ana Velic2, Boris Macek2, Dorothee Kretschmer3, Christopher Weidenmaier3, Andreas Hector1, Rupert Handgretinger1, Friedrich Götz3, Andreas Peschel3,4, Dominik Hartl1,4, Nikolaus Rieber1,4,5.
Abstract
Staphylococcus aureus is one of the major human bacterial pathogens causing a broad spectrum of serious infections. Myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSC) represent an innate immune cell subset capable of regulating host-pathogen interactions, yet their role in the pathogenesis of S. aureus infections remains incompletely defined. The aim of this study was to determine the influence of different S. aureus strains and associated virulence factors on human MDSC generation. Using an in vitro MDSC generation assay we demonstrate that low concentrations of supernatants of different S. aureus strains led to an induction of functional MDSC, whereas increased concentrations, conversely, reduced MDSC numbers. The concentration-dependent reduction of MDSC correlated with T cell proliferation and cytotoxicity. Several findings supported a role for staphylococcal enterotoxins in modulating MDSC generation. Staphylococcal enterotoxins recapitulated concentration-dependent MDSC induction and inhibition, T cell proliferation and cytotoxicity, while an enterotoxin-deficient S. aureus strain largely failed to alter MDSC. Taken together, we identified staphylococcal enterotoxins as main modulators of MDSC generation. The inhibition of MDSC generation by staphylococcal enterotoxins might represent a novel therapeutic target in S. aureus infections and beyond in non-infectious conditions, such as cancer.Entities:
Keywords: MDSC; S. aureus; Staphylococcus aureus; T cells; enterotoxin; granulocytes; immunomodulation; myeloid-derived suppressor cells
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30271756 PMCID: PMC6146041 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2018.00321
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Bacterial strains used in this study.
| USA300 (FPR3757) | ATCC BAA-1516, NCBI 451515, NRS482 | Referred to as ‘USA300’ in this study; CA-MRSA; | McDougal et al., |
| USA300 (LAC) Δ | n.a. | CA-MRSA; deleted | Cheung et al., |
| USA300 (JE2) | JE2 | CA-MRSA; derived from USA300 (LAC) by curing of three plasmids; parental strain of transposon insertion mutants collected in the Nebraska Transposon Mutant Library | Fey et al., |
| USA300 (JE2) | NE66 | Tn insertion in preprotein translocase gene SAUSA300_2584 | Fey et al., |
| USA300 (JE2) putative enterotoxin type A- | NE309 | Tn insertion in putative enterotoxin type A gene SAUSA300_1559 | Fey et al., |
| USA300 (JE2) | NE1255 | Tn insertion in enterotoxin K gene SAUSA300_0800 | Fey et al., |
| USA300 (JE2) | NE1605 | Tn insertion in enterotoxin Q gene SAUSA300_0801 | Fey et al., |
| USA300 (JE2) | NE1809 | Tn insertion in putative enterotoxin selX gene SAUSA300_0370 | Fey et al., |
| USA300 (SF8300) | n.a. | CA-MRSA | Diep et al., |
| USA300 (SF8300) Δ | n.a. | Deleted | Diep et al., |
| USA400 (MW2) | ATCC BAA-1707, NCBI 196620, NRS123 | CA-MRSA | Baba et al., |
| N315 | NCBI 158879, NRS70 | HA-MRSA | Kuroda et al., |
| Mu50 | ATCC 700699, NCBI 158878, NRS1 | Vancomycin-intermediate HA-MRSA | Kuroda et al., |
| COL | NCBI 93062, NRS100 | HA-MRSA, | Gill et al., |
| Newman | ATCC 13420, NCTC 8178, NCBI 426430 | MSSA; | Baba et al., |
| Newman φSa2MW | n.a. | Newman lysogenized with φSa2MW carrying | Wirtz et al., |
| PS187 | ATCC 15564, NCTC 9754, NCBI 1323662 | MSSA; prototype of ST395 lineage; unique WTA structure with a GroP-GalNAc backbone | Winstel et al., |
| NCTC 8325; RN1 | NCTC 8325, NCBI 93061, NRS77 | MSSA; parental strain of 8325-4, RN4220, HG003, SA113, RN6390; φ11+ φ12+ φ13+, | Novick, |
| HG003 | n.a. | RN1 derivative; φ11+ φ12+ φ13+, | Herbert et al., |
| SA113 | ATCC 35556, DSM 4910 | RN1 derivative; MNNG mutagenesis; φ11+ φ12+ φ13+, | Iordanescu and Surdeanu, |
| 8325-4; RN0450 | NRS135 | RN1 derivative; UV mutagenesis; φ11- φ12- φ13-, | Novick, |
| RN6390 | n.a. | RN1 derivative; UV mutagenesis, φ6390 lysogenized and Tn554 | Peng et al., |
| RN4220 | NCBI 561307, NRS144, DSM 26309 | RN1 derivative; UV and MNNG mutagenesis; φ11- φ12- φ13-, | Kreiswirth et al., |
| TM300 | NCBI 396513 | Meat starter culture bacterium, apathogenic | Rosenstein et al., |
| PAO-1 | ATCC 15692, NCBI 208964, DSM 22644 | MDSC-inducing opportunistic pathogen, persists in cystic fibrosis | Stover et al., |
Strain IDs were taken from American Type Culture Collection (ATCC), National Collection of Type Cultures (NCTC) and from DSMZ, German Collection of Microorganisms and Cell Cultures. JE, NE and NRS numbers correspond to IDs from the Network on Antimicrobial Resistance in Staphylococcus aureus (NARSA) program. Described are relevant genotypic features referring to determination or to regulation of virulence within the scope of this study.
FPR3757 and LAC are different isolates from the same PFGE-type (USA300-0114) of S. aureus. JE2 derivative strains display an insertion of the mariner-based bursa aurealis transposon in the respective genes. Disrupted genes are marked with a ‘-’; deleted loci are denoted with a ‘Δ’. ACME, arginine catabolic mobile element; agr, accessory gene regulator; CA, community-acquired; fnbA, Fibronectin binding protein A; fnbB, Fibronectin binding protein B; GalNAc, N-acetyl-d-galactosamine; GroP, glycerophosphate; HA, hospital-acquired; hlb, hemolysin beta; MRSA, Methicillin-resistant S. aureus; MSSA, Methicillin-susceptible S. aureus; PFGE, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis; PVL, Panton-Valentine leukocidin; r– m–, restriction-modification mutant; rsbU – regulator of sigma factor SigB; saeRS, S. aureus exoprotein expression regulatory system; secA, Sec system protein translocase subunit A; sek, Staphylococcal enterotoxin k; seq, Staphylococcal enterotoxin q; SigB, RNA polymerase sigma factor B; tcaR, Teicoplanin-resistance associated HTH-type transcriptional regulator; Tn, transposon; selX- Staphylococcal enterotoxin-like X; WTA, wall teichoic acid; φ, Prophage Phi. n.a., not available.
Figure 1Supernatants from S. aureus strains differentially modulate PMN-like MDSC levels. PBMC were stimulated with supernatants prepared from overnight cultures of the indicated staphylococcal strains and PMN-like MDSC were assessed by flow cytometry. (A) Phenotypic determination of PMN-like MDSC in PBMC. The granulocytic region was gated in the forward-side-scatter. Afterwards CD33+CD14− cells (Quadrant Q1) were gated and PMN-like MDSC were determined as SSChighCD33+CD14− cells. Further flowcytrometric analysis revealed that these granulocytic cells are partly CD16+. The dot plots illustrate the modulation of PMN-like MDSC mediated by supernatants from NCTC 8325 and USA300 [at 3% (hi) concentration] as compared to medium only. (B) S. aureus-induced PMN-MDSC dose-dependently suppress T-cell proliferation. PMN-like MDSC were induced using 0.02% of USA300 supernatants, isolated by CD33 MACS separation and co-cultured for 4 days with freshly isolated, CFSE-stained PBMC at given ratios. CFSE-fluorescence intensity of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells was analyzed by flow cytometry. Left panel: Histograms showing suppression of T cell proliferation. Right panel: Bars represent the proliferation index. The values are normalized to the proliferation of CD4+ cells or CD8+ T cells without addition of MDSC. Bars represent means ± SEM. Differences between MDSC co-cultures and controls were analyzed by a one-sample t-test. (C) Screening of S. aureus supernatants for modulation of PMN-like MDSC induction. PBMC were stimulated using 3 vol.% of supernatants prepared from overnight cultures of the indicated staphylococcal strains. Except for RN6390, all tested S. aureus strains inhibited the PMN-like MDSC formation. S. aureus strains are illustrated in black bars except for NCTC 8325 members (shown in dark gray bars). S. carnosus is shown in light gray bars. (D) Screening of NCTC 8325 derivative strains. All tested members of the NCTC 8325 family consistently induced PMN-like MDSC. Bars represent means ± SEM. Differences between stimulations and controls (C,D) were analyzed by a one-sample t-test. Differences between different wild-type and mutant S. aureus strains (C,D) were analyzed by a Mann-Whitney test or by an unpaired t-test. *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001; ns–not significant.
Figure 2S. aureus supernatants dose-dependently modulate PMN-like MDSC formation, proliferation and cytotoxic effects in PBMC. PBMC were treated with supernatants from S. aureus strains USA300, NCTC 8325, Newman, and COL in a broad concentration range. (A,B) PMN-like MDSC were quantified by flow cytometry. (C,D) Proliferation of total PBMC was assessed by trypan blue staining. (E,F) Cell death in total PBMC cultures was measured by PI staining and subsequent flow cytometry. Data are presented as means ± SEM. Differences between stimulations and medium controls were analyzed by a one-sample t-test and are depicted in colors referring to the respective curves. *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001; ****p < 0.0001.
Figure 3PMN-like MDSC inhibition outweighs induction by different S. aureus supernatants. PBMC were stimulated simultaneously with high and low doses of supernatants taken from different S. aureus strains. PMN-like MDSC induction mediated by supernatants from S. aureus strains USA300 or Newman (A) and from the less active NCTC 8325 strain (B) is suppressed by supernatants derived from other strains at concentrations previously shown to be inhibitory. For induction of PMN-like MDSC (shown as light gray bars), low concentrations (0.01%) from USA300 or Newman and high concentrations (10%) from NCTC 8325 were used. For suppression (shown as black bars), high concentrations (3%) from USA300 or Newman were used. Mixed stimulations are illustrated as dark gray bars. Data sets are represented as means ± SEM. Differences between stimulations and medium controls were analyzed by a one-sample t-test. Differences between single and mixed stimulations were analyzed by a Mann-Whitney test. *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001.
Figure 4PMN-like MDSC levels are modulated by heat-stable S. aureus proteins sized 10 to 50 kDa. S. aureus supernatants were pre-treated prior to stimulation of PBMC. (A) Pre-treatment with 20 μg/ml of proteinase K at 37°C for 16 h, (B) heat-treatment at 80°C for 20 min, (C) filtration through spin columns with MWCO cut-off pores as indicated. 3% (USA300 or Newman) or 10% (NCTC 8325) of supernatants were used as high concentrations (black bars), 0.01% (all tested strains) were used as low concentrations (gray bars). Data are presented as means ± SEM. Differences between stimulated samples and medium controls were analyzed by a one-sample t-test. Differences between different pre-treatment conditions (A,B) were analyzed by a Mann-Whitney test. *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001; ****p < 0.0001; ns–not significant.
Figure 5Staphylococcal enterotoxins dose-dependently modulate PMN-like MDSC formation, proliferation and cytotoxic effects in PBMC. (A) PMN-like MDSC were quantified by flow cytometry. (B) Proliferation of total PBMC was assessed by trypan blue staining. (C) Cytotoxic effects in total PBMC cultures was measured by PI staining and subsequent flow cytometry. (D) T-cell suppression. PMN-like MDSC were induced by stimulation of PBMC with SEA (0.1 ng/ml) for 7 days, and the CFSE proliferation assay was run as described in Figure 1. Bars represent the proliferation index. (E) Cross-inhibition of MDSC formation by enterotoxins. High enterotoxin concentrations inhibited PMN-like MDSC induction mediated by S. aureus supernatants or by other enterotoxins. PBMC were stimulated with high concentrations (3% of USA300 or Newman supernatants, 5 ng/ml of SEA, or SEB, shown as black bars) and low concentrations (0.01% of USA300 or Newman supernatants, 0.1 ng/ml of SEA or SEB, light gray bars), respectively. Mixed stimulations are shown as dark gray bars. (F) Heat-stable nature of SEA. Both SEA-mediated induction and suppression of PMN-like MDSC was not affected by heat-treatment. SEA was heated at 80°C for 20 min prior to stimulation at 0.1 ng/ml (gray bars) or at 10 ng/ml (black bars). Data are presented as means ± SEM. Differences between stimulated samples and medium controls were analyzed by a one-sample t-test. Differences between single and mixed stimulations (E) or between heat-treated and non-treated samples (F) were analyzed by a Mann-Whitney test. Statistical results are shown in colors referring to the respective curves. *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001; ****p < 0.0001; ns–not significant.
Figure 6Mutations in sek and seq affect PMN-like MDSC modulating activities of S. aureus supernatants. For stimulation of PBMC, supernatants from JE2 strains harboring transposon mutations in the genes sek, seq, selX and in a putative “type A”enterotoxin gene were used. (A) PMN-like MDSC inducing and inhibiting capacities of JE2 supernatants were affected by mutations in the sek and seq genes. (B) Mutations in selX and in the gene encoding the “type A”enterotoxin had no effect on PMN-like MDSC levels. Data represent means ± SEM. *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001.
Quantification of enterotoxins and enterotoxin-like proteins secreted by S. aureus strains.
| NWMN_0400 | SEA | 257 | 29.7 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1,259,600,000 | |
| SACOL0907 | SEB | 266 | 31.4 | 0 | 0 | 49,282,000,000 | 0 | |
| G8RCC1 | SEB-like | 0 | 1,328,100 | 0 | 7,862,500 | |||
| SAUSA300_0800, SACOL0886 | SEK | 242 | 27.8 | 118,420,000 | 0 | 4,856,160,000 | 7,460,700 | |
| Q6G7U0 | SEK2 | 242 | 27.8 | 0 | 0 | 7,080,700 | 0 | |
| SAUSA300_0801, SACOL0887 | SEQ, SEI | 242 | 28.2 | 849,400,000 | 0 | 2,840,600,000 | 0 | |
| SAZ172_0832 | SEL | 256 | 29.8 | 0 | 0 | 741,110,000 | 0 | |
| HMPREF0769_11854 | SEU | 261 | 30.5 | 0 | 0 | 2,741,200,000 | 0 | |
| CH52_09990 | Yent1 | 131 | 15.3 | 0 | 0 | 42,015,000 | 0 | |
| SAUSA300_0370, SACOL0442, NWMN_0362 | SElX | 203 | 23.2 | 16,568,000 | 0 | 26,516,000 | 3,726,600,000 | |
| Total LFQ | 984,388,000 | 1,328,100 | 60,536,681,700 | 5,001,523,200 | ||||
Supernatants derived from TSB overnight cultures were analyzed for their relative amounts of enterotoxins and enterotoxin-like proteins by mass spectrometry. The secreted proteins were proteolytically digested and the resulting peptides were aligned with protein sequence entries in the UniProt databases. Shown are all proteins identified as enterotoxins in UniProt databases by means of peptide alignments. Locus tags, designation of genes and proteins, sizes and molecular weights (both of which including signal sequences) refer to the proteins detected in the supernatants of the respective strains and are taken from UniProt databases and from genomic S. aureus databases (GenBank). If not available, locus IDs and designations were deduced from homologous proteins of other strains, or were listed as UniProt ID. High LFQ intensities correspond with high expression levels. LFQ, label free quantification. [a] Data not available in UniProt or in GenBank databases. [b] UniProt ID (locus tag not available in S. aureus databases). [c] Locus entries taken from homologs of strains Z172 (SAZ172_0832), MN8 (HMPREF0769_11854) and 502A (CH52_09990). [d] The obtained peptide sequences are linked to UniProt entry G8RCC1 which is the SEB protein. Since the seb gene is absent from the annotated NCTC 8325 and Newman genomes, the putative protein is termed “SEB-like” in this study. [e] The peptide sequences refer to protein SEK2, sharing 99% homology and 97% identity with SEK from COL using blastp analyses. In several strains, SEK2 is also designated SEK. [f] The proteins SEQ in USA300 and SEI in COL share 98% homology and 97% identity as determined by blastp analyses. [g] Yent1 is a homolog fragment of SEU in several S. aureus strains.
Figure 7S. aureus supernatants and enterotoxins interfere with other MDSC-inducing substances. PBMC were stimulated simultaneously with 10 ng/ml GM-CSF and increasing concentrations of Newman supernatants (A) or SEA (B). High concentrations of S. aureus supernatants (3%) or enterotoxins (5 ng/ml) were used for co-stimulation with IL-2 (100 U/ml) (C), P. aeruginosa PAO-1 supernatants (1%) (D) or Aspergillus fumigatus lysates (10 μg/ml) (E). Data represent means ± SEM. Differences between stimulated PBMC and medium controls (white bars) were analyzed by a one-sample t-test. Differences between single and mixed stimulations were analyzed by a Mann-Whitney test *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001; ****p < 0.0001; ns–not significant.