| Literature DB >> 32245010 |
Marialaura Marchetti1, Omar De Bei2, Stefano Bettati1,3,4,5, Barbara Campanini2, Sandra Kovachka6, Eleonora Gianquinto6, Francesca Spyrakis6, Luca Ronda1,3,4.
Abstract
Nutritional immunity is a form of innate immunity widespread in both vertebrates and invertebrates. The term refers to a rich repertoire of mechanisms set up by the host to inhibit bacterial proliferation by sequestering trace minerals (mainly iron, but also zinc and manganese). This strategy, selected by evolution, represents an effective front-line defense against pathogens and has thus inspired the exploitation of iron restriction in the development of innovative antimicrobials or enhancers of antimicrobial therapy. This review focuses on the mechanisms of nutritional immunity, the strategies adopted by opportunistic human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus to circumvent it, and the impact of deletion mutants on the fitness, infectivity, and persistence inside the host. This information finally converges in an overview of the current development of inhibitors targeting the different stages of iron uptake, an as-yet unexploited target in the field of antistaphylococcal drug discovery.Entities:
Keywords: Staphylococcus aureus; hemophores; iron; nutritional immunity; siderophores; virulence
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32245010 PMCID: PMC7139808 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21062145
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Schematic illustration of human proteins recruited in iron sequestration within the nutritional immunity (left), and Staphylococcus aureus effectors in iron retrieval (right). For protein representation, the following Protein Data Bank entries have been used: transferrin (1d3k), lactoferrin (1b0l), ferritin (1fha), hemopexin (1qhu), Hp 1-1 (extracted from 4wjg), IsdBN1N2 (extracted from 5vmm), IsdHN2N3 (extracted from 6tb2), FepB (3o72, illustration of the homolog Escherichia coli EfeB), and Hb/heme/iron (1a3n). Staphyloferrin A and B, and staphylopine have been modelled on the basis of Endicott et al. [46] and Deane [47] works, respectively. Proteins are divided into three groups based on the source of iron they exploit.
Protein Data Bank (PDB) accession codes of proteins involved in iron acquisition by Staphylococcus aureus.
| PDB Codes | Protein | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| 3lhs, 3li2 | HtsA | [ |
| 3eiw, 3eix | HtsA | [ |
| 5d84, 5d85 | SbnA | [ |
| 4m54, 4mp3, 4mp6, 4mp8, 4mpd | SbnB | [ |
| 4tv5 | SbnG | [ |
| 5uje | SbnI | [ |
| 6knh and 6kni | SbnH | [ |
| 3mwf, 3mwg | SirA | [ |
| 4fna, 4fil | FhuD2 | [ |
| 4b8y | FhuD2 | [ |
| 5twb, 5twc | IruO | [ |
| 7ahl | Hla | [ |
| 3b07 | Hlg | [ |
| 4q7g | LukD | [ |
| 3roh | LukE | [ |
| 3i41 | β-toxin | [ |
| 2kam | δ-toxin | [ |
| 1t2p, 1t2w | SrtA | [ |
| 1ng5 | SrtB | [ |
| 4lfd | SrtB | [ |
| 4xs0 | IsdH-Hb | [ |
| 5vmm | IsdB-Hb | [ |
| 6tb2 | IsdH-Hb-Hp | [ |
| 2ite, 2itf | IsdA | [ |
| 2o6p | IsdC | [ |
| 2q8q | IsdE | [ |
| 1xbw | IsdG | [ |
| 3lgn | IsdI | [ |
Figure 2Structures of the three siderophores of S. aureus, adapted from Neumann et al. [106] on the basis of iron-bound models [46,47]. The chemical structures were drawn with Chemicalize.
S. aureus deletion mutants in animal models of infection.
| System | Gene Cluster | Regulation | Strain | Deletion | Gene Contribution to Virulence in Vivo | Mouse Model of Infection | Evaluated District of Infection | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||||
| Sortases |
| Constitutive | Newman |
| Yes | C57BL/6, Swiss-Webster (intravenous) | Kidney | [ |
|
| Fur | Newman |
| Yes | NMRI (intra-articular) | Joints, kidney, blood | [ | |
| Newman, USA300 |
| Yes | BALB/c (intravenous) | Kidney | [ | |||
| Newman D2C |
| Yes | BALB/c (mammary injection) | Mammary glands | [ | |||
| Newman |
| Yes | CD-1 (intraperitoneal), | Systemic, joints, | [ | |||
| NMRI (intravenous), C3H/HeJ (bladder), Sprague-Dawley rats (intravenous) | kidney, heart | |||||||
| Newman |
| Yes | NMRI (intravenous) | Joints, kidney | [ | |||
| Newman |
| Mild | Swiss-Webster (intravenous) | Kidney | [ | |||
| Newman |
| Mild | NMRI (intravenous) | Joints, kidney | [ | |||
| Newman |
| Mild | CD-1 (intraperitoneal), NMRI (intravenous), C3H/HeJ (bladder), Sprague-Dawley rats (intravenous) | Systemic, joints, kidney, heart | [ | |||
| Isd |
| Fur | Newman |
| No | BALB/c (intranasal) | Lung | [ |
|
| Fur | Newman |
| Yes | BALB/c (retro-orbital) | Lung, heart, kidney | [ | |
|
| Fur | Newman |
| Yes | BALB/c (intravenous) | Kidney | [ | |
|
| Fur | Newman |
| Mild | BALB/c (intravenous) | Kidney | [ | |
|
| Fur | Newman |
| No | BALB/c (intravenous) | Kidney | [ | |
| Newman |
| Yes | C57BL/6J (retro-orbital) | Heart | [ | |||
| Newman |
| No | C57BL/6J (retro-orbital) | Liver | [ | |||
| Newman |
| Yes | BALB/c (retro-orbital) | Kidney | [ | |||
| Newman |
| No | BALB/c (retro-orbital) | Kidney | [ | |||
| Newman |
| Yes | BALB/c (retro-orbital) | Heart | [ | |||
| Newman |
| No | BALB/c (retro-orbital) | Kidney | [ | |||
| Newman |
| Yes | BALB/c (retro-orbital) | Kidney | [ | |||
| Newman |
| No | BALB/c (retro-orbital) | Liver | [ | |||
| Newman |
| Mild | BALB/c (retro-orbital) | Kidney, spleen | [ | |||
| Newman |
| Yes | BALB/c (retro-orbital) | Kidney, spleen | [ | |||
| 8325-4 |
| Yes | NMRI (intravenous) | Blood | [ | |||
|
| ||||||||
|
| ||||||||
| Hss |
| Constitutive, activated by heme | Newman |
| Mutation increase virulence | BALB/c (retro-orbital) | Liver | [ |
| Newman |
| No | BALB/c (retro-orbital) | Spleen, kidney | [ | |||
| Hrt |
| HssRS | Newman |
| Mutation increase virulence | BALB/c (retro-orbital) | Liver | [ |
| Newman |
| No | BALB/c (retro-orbital) | Spleen, kidney | [ | |||
|
| ||||||||
| Staphyloferrin A |
| Fur | Newman |
| Yes | BALB/c (subcutaneous) | Skin | [ |
|
| Fur | Newman |
| Yes | BALB/c (subcutaneous) | Skin | [ | |
|
| Fur | |||||||
| MW2 |
| Yes | Swiss-Webster (intravenous) | Kidney | [ | |||
| Newman |
| No | BALB/c (intranasal) | Lung | [ | |||
| Newman |
| Yes | BALB/c (retro-orbital) | Lung, heart, kidney | [ | |||
| Newman |
| Yes | BALB/c (intravenous) | Kidney, liver | [ | |||
| Staphyloferrin B |
| Fur, SbnI | Newman |
| Yes | Swiss-Webster (intravenous) | Kidney | [ |
|
| Fur | Newman |
| No | BALB/c (subcutaneous) | Skin | [ | |
| MW2 |
| Yes | Swiss-Webster (intravenous) | Kidney | [ | |||
| Newman |
| No | BALB/c (intravenous) | Heart, kidney, liver | [ | |||
| Newman |
| Yes | BALB/c (intravenous) | Heart, kidney, liver | [ | |||
| Newman |
| Yes | BALB/c (intravenous) | Heart, kidney, liver | [ | |||
|
| ||||||||
|
| ||||||||
| Hydroxamate |
| Fur | Newman |
| Yes | CD1 (intravenous) | Kidney, blood | [ |
|
| Fur | Newman |
| Yes | Swiss-Webster (intravenous) | Kidney | [ | |
|
| Fur | |||||||
| Catecholate |
| Fur | Newman |
| Yes | BALB/c (intravenous) | Heart | [ |
|
| ||||||||
| Fep |
| Constitutive | RN1HG |
| Yes | BALB/c (intravenous) | Kidney | [ |
|
| Fur | |||||||
Figure 3Schematic representation of Deferiprone (Ferriprox®) and DIBI in their iron-bound forms (adapted from [249]). The chemical structures were drawn with Chemicalize.
Figure 4Schematic representation of the state-of-the-art Trojan horses (adapted from [261,262]). The chemical structures were drawn with Chemicalize.
Figure 5Representation of Ga-derivatives. The chemical structures were drawn with Chemicalize.