| Literature DB >> 32390958 |
Madison M Collins1, Ranjan K Behera2, Kyler B Pallister1, Tyler J Evans1, Owen Burroughs1, Caralyn Flack1, Fermin E Guerra1, Willis Pullman1, Brock Cone1, Jennifer G Dankoff1, Tyler K Nygaard1, Shaun R Brinsmade2, Jovanka M Voyich1.
Abstract
Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) causes a range of diseases ranging from superficial skin and soft-tissue infections to invasive and life-threatening conditions (Klevens et al., 2007; Kobayashi et al., 2015). S. aureus utilizes the Sae sensory system to adapt to neutrophil challenge. Although the roles of the SaeR response regulator and its cognate sensor kinase SaeS have been demonstrated to be critical for surviving neutrophil interaction and for causing infection, the roles for the accessory proteins SaeP and SaeQ remain incompletely defined. To characterize the functional role of these proteins during innate immune interaction, we generated isogenic deletion mutants lacking these accessory genes in USA300 (USA300ΔsaeP and USA300ΔsaeQ). S. aureus survival was increased following phagocytosis of USA300ΔsaeP compared to USA300 by neutrophils. Additionally, secreted extracellular proteins produced by USA300ΔsaeP cells caused significantly more plasma membrane damage to human neutrophils than extracellular proteins produced by USA300 cells. Deletion of saeQ resulted in a similar phenotype, but effects did not reach significance during neutrophil interaction. The enhanced cytotoxicity of USA300ΔsaeP cells toward human neutrophils correlated with an increased expression of bi-component leukocidins known to target these immune cells. A saeP and saeQ double mutant (USA300ΔsaePQ) showed a significant increase in survival following neutrophil phagocytosis that was comparable to the USA300ΔsaeP single mutant and increased the virulence of USA300 during murine bacteremia. These data provide evidence that SaeP modulates the Sae-mediated response of S. aureus against human neutrophils and suggest that saeP and saeQ together impact pathogenesis in vivo.Entities:
Keywords: Staphylococcus aureus; gene regulation; neutrophil; sae; virulence
Year: 2020 PMID: 32390958 PMCID: PMC7189620 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.00561
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
FIGURE 1Generation of an isogenic saeQ mutant. (A) (Above) Schematic of the four genes of the sae locus. Bent arrows indicate transcriptional start sites described in Novick and Jiang (2003), Steinhuber et al. (2003), and Jeong et al. (2011). (Below) Results of agarose gel electrophoresis showing USA300 mutants lacking saeP (from Kavanaugh et al., 2019), saeQ, and respective complemented strains. Letters at the bottom of the gel indicate the sae gene targeted by PCR analysis. Primer sequences are included in Table 1. (B) TaqMan® RT-PCR analysis of saeS and saeR transcript levels in USA300ΔsaeP and USA300ΔsaeQ relative to USA300 at mid-exponential phase (ME) and early stationary phase (ES). Transcript levels in samples were analyzed in triplicate and results are from two independent experiments. (C) In vitro growth of USA300, USA300ΔsaeP, USA300ΔsaeQ, and USA300ΔsaePQRS (Flack et al., 2014) measured by optical density at 600 nm (OD600) (left) and colony forming units (CFUs) (right). Timepoints are indicated by the bracket on the OD600 plot. Arrows indicate time points for RNA harvest (used in B). Data are presented as the mean ± SEM of seven independent experiments. n.d., not detected.
Primers used to generate S. aureus mutant strains, respective complemented strains, and TaqMan® primer and probe sequences.
| Forward | 5′-GTTGTTGAATTCACCTGATACATTACAGACC-3′ | 600 bp upstream of | |
| Reverse | 5′-CAGAAATTGAGTACTAGATCTGTATTCATGCTAACTCCTCATTTC-3′ | Upstream of | |
| Forward | 5′-GAATACAGATCTAGTACTCAATTTCTGAGTTAAACTTTTATTTACAAC-3′ | Downstream of | |
| Reverse | 5′-GTTGTTGGTACCAAGAAACTAGCAGCATATGC-3′ | 600 bp downstream of | |
| Forward | 5′-GTTGTTGAATTCCCTAACAGGTACATTCAGTTC-3′ | EcoR1, 600 bp upstream of | |
| Reverse | 5′-GCGAGTACTAGATCTCATTCTTTCTATTATTGTGTGTAATTTATAT-3′ | Upstream of | |
| Forward | 5′-AGAATGAGATCTAGTACTCGCAAATATAGTTGCACATAC-3′ | 165 bp into | |
| Reverse | 5′-GTTGTTGGTACCGATGGTATATGTTGTAAAGCTCTC-3′ | This work | |
| Forward | 5′-TAATTTAGCGCCGCCGAAGA-3′ | This work | |
| Reverse | 5′-TTTTTAGCAGCTGGTGCTGT-3′ | This work | |
| Forward | 5′- CTCTGTTCTTACGACCTCTAAAGTAAT-3′ | This work | |
| Reverse | 5′-GTTTAGTACCAGTCATCGCTAACA-3′ | This work | |
| Forward | 5′-GGTGGTGAATTCTTAACTTATCAAATTGAAGAAATGAGGAGTTAGC-3′ | pEPSA5- | This work |
| Reverse | 5′-ACCACCGGATCCAATTGATTATTTTAATTTAGCGCCGCC-3′ | pEPSA5- | This work |
| Forward | 5′-GGTGGTGAATTCTTATATAAATTACACACAATAAATAGAAAGAATGTGAACATC-3′ | pEPSA5- | This work |
| Reverse | 5′-GGTGGTGGATCCTGTTCATCATCCACGATCAGTAAGT-3′ | pEPSA5- | This work |
| Forward | 5′-CACCTAACAGGTACATTCAGTTCTA-3′ | This work | |
| Reverse | 5′-GGTAGACGTATAAATCTGGACCTTT-3′ | This work | |
| Probe | 5′-ACGGTGAAACTGTTGAAGGTAAAGCTGA-3′ | This work | |
| Forward | 5′-CACCAGAGTGGTATAAGTGGTT-3′ | This work | |
| Reverse | 5′-CAAAGCCTCCAAAGAAACTAGC-3′ | This work | |
| Probe | 5′-TTGTTGTCCCACTCGGAGAGATTGC-3′ | This work | |
FIGURE 2Deletion of saeP significantly increases S. aureus survival and toxicity during neutrophil interaction. (A) Percent S. aureus ingested by neutrophils. Samples were collected on an Image Stream® Imaging Flow Cytometer and S. aureus internalization was analyzed using the IDEAS software® as described in Materials and Methods for three independent experiments. (B) Numbers of ingested S. aureus per PMN are shown. The average number of S. aureus detected to be ingested per PMN is ∼ 10 for all strains. Data are presented as the mean ± SEM of three independent experiments. (C) Percent survival for the indicated strains and timepoints is shown. Bacterial survival is significantly increased in USA300ΔsaeP compared to USA300 at 5 h following phagocytosis. Survival was calculated with the following equation: (CFU + PMN at timen/CFU + PMN at time0) × 100 (as in Voyich et al., 2005). Data are presented as the mean ± SEM of six independent experiments. At 0.5 h, USA300ΔsaePQRS was significantly different from USA300 **P ≤ 0.001 using one-way ANOVA with Tukey’s post-test. At 5 h, *P ≤ 0.05 and **P ≤ 0.001 relative to USA300 using one-way ANOVA and Tukey’s post-test. (D) Supernatants from USA300ΔsaeP cultures cause significantly more neutrophil plasma membrane damage compared to supernatants from USA300 cultures. S. aureus strains were grown to early stationary phase, supernatants harvested as described in Materials and Methods (diluted 1:10), and incubated with neutrophils for 1 h. Propidium iodide (PI) uptake was assessed by flow cytometry. Data are presented as the mean ± SEM of five independent experiments. *P ≤ 0.05, ****P ≤ 0.0001 using one-way ANOVA with Tukey’s post-test. ctl, neutrophil-only control. ns, not significant.
FIGURE 3USA300ΔsaeP demonstrates increased transcript abundance of several known SaeR/S-virulence factors. (A) Mean fold-change of known SaeR/S-regulated virulence genes in USA300ΔsaeP and USA300ΔsaeQ relative to USA300 is shown. Transcript abundance was measured using TaqMan® RT-PCR at mid-exponential (ME; left) and early stationary (ES; right) phases of in vitro growth. Transcripts were normalized to gyrB and calibrated to transcript abundance in USA300. Data are from at least two independent experiments. (B) The USA300ΔsaeP strain of S. aureus produces significantly more Panton Valentine Leukocidin (PVL) compared to USA300. (Top) Representative Western blot of PVL protein in supernatants from S. aureus grown overnight. (Bottom) Quantification of PVL was calculated using densitometry as described in Materials and Methods. Data shown are amounts relative to USA300 and presented as the mean ± SEM of three independent experiments. *P ≤ 0.05 One-Way ANOVA with Tukey’s post-test. n.d., not detected.
FIGURE 4saeQ contributes to staphylococcal disease during bacteremia. Groups of 10 C57BL/6 mice were infected intravenously via the tail vein with 1 × 107 CFU of the indicated S. aureus strains. Survival curves are from two independent experiments ****P < 0.0001, log-rank (Mantel-Cox) test.
FIGURE 5USA300ΔsaePQ demonstrates enhanced survival following neutrophil phagocytosis. (A) USA300ΔsaePQ survives neutrophil killing significantly better than USA300 after 5 h incubation. Data are presented as the mean ± SEM of eight independent experiments. (B) PMN plasma membrane damage was significantly increased in neutrophils infected with USA300ΔsaePQ compared to infection with USA300 (neutrophil: bacteria ratio of 1:5). Propidium iodide uptake was assessed at 3 h post-infection by flow cytometry and indicate USA300ΔsaePQ produces significantly more cytolytic proteins in the supernatants than USA300. Data are presented as the mean ± SEM of five independent experiments. (C) Transcript abundance of lukG is increased in USA300ΔsaePQ relative to expression in USA300 at early stationary phase. Gene transcripts were normalized to gyrB and calibrated to the expression levels of USA300. (D) Deletion of saePQ did not significantly impact abscess area. C57BL/6 mice were infected subcutaneously with 1 × 107 CFU of S. aureus. Abscess area was measured daily and results shown are the average of five mice per group. *P ≤ 0.05, **P ≤ 0.01, ***P ≤ 0.001, ****P ≤ 0.0001 via one-way ANOVA Tukey’s post-test. Data are presented as the mean ± SEM.
FIGURE 6Deletion of saePQ enhances the virulence in S. aureus in a mouse model of systemic infection. Survival curves for C57BL/6 mice (n = 13/group) challenged with either 1 × 107 CFU S. aureus or USA300 or USA300ΔsaePQ via tail vein injection. Data shown are death from infection and euthanasia (for exceeding scores on the welfare rubric) during the 72 h endpoint. Data are from two independent experiments. ****P < 0.0001, log-rank (Mantel-Cox) test.