| Literature DB >> 33289597 |
Fernanda M A Leal Zimmer1,2, Jéssica Andrade Paes1,2, Arnaldo Zaha1,2,3,4, Henrique Bunselmeyer Ferreira1,2,3,4.
Abstract
Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae: is the etiological agent of porcine enzootic pneumonia (EP), a disease that impacts the swine industry worldwide. Pathogen-induced damage, as well as the elicited host-response, contribute to disease. Here, we provide an overview of EP epidemiology, control and prevention, and a more in-depth review of M. hyopneumoniae pathogenicity determinants, highlighting some molecular mechanisms of pathogen-host interactions relevant for pathogenesis. Based on recent functional, immunological, and comparative "omics" results, we discuss the roles of many known or putative M. hyopneumoniae virulence factors, along with host molecules involved in EP. Moreover, the known molecular bases of pathogenicity mechanisms, including M. hyopneumoniae adhesion to host respiratory epithelium, protein secretion, cell damage, host microbicidal response and its modulation, and maintenance of M. hyopneumoniae homeostasis during infection are described. Recent findings regarding M. hyopneumoniae pathogenicity determinants also contribute to the development of novel diagnostic tests, vaccines, and treatments for EP.Entities:
Keywords: Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae ; host response; pathogenicity; porcine enzootic pneumonia; virulence factors
Year: 2020 PMID: 33289597 PMCID: PMC7733983 DOI: 10.1080/21505594.2020.1842659
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virulence ISSN: 2150-5594 Impact factor: 5.882
Figure 1.Schematic representation of . (a) M. hyopneumoniae cells attach to the cilia of respiratory epithelium, causing ciliostasis, cilium loss, and subsequent epithelial cell death. M. hyopneumoniae cells may form biofilms on the ciliated epithelial surface. M. hyopneumoniae also interacts with molecules from the ECM, such as fibronectin and plasminogen. (b) M. hyopneumoniae adhesion to ciliated cells is mediated by bacterial adhesins that interact with host ligands, as GAGs (displayed on cilia surface), and extracellular actin. (c) Adhesins of M. hyopneumoniae are endoproteolytically processed by surface-displayed proteases, generating a combinatorial library of adhesin proteoforms exposed on the bacterial surface. Dashed lines represent damaged ciliated epithelial cells
M. hyopneumoniae surface adhesins and adhesion-related proteins and their host ligands
| Protein name | Host ligands b | Endoproteolytic processing c | References | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 232 | 7448 | J | ||||
| 46 kDa surface antigen (p46) | mhp511 | MHP7448_0513 | MHJ_0511 | Fibronectin, heparin | Y | [ |
| ABC transporter xylose-binding lipoprotein | mhp623 | MHP7448_0604 | MHJ_0606 | Fibronectin, heparin | Y | [ |
| Acetate kinase | mhp505 | MHP7448_0508 | MHJ_0505 | Heparin | Y | [ |
| Adenine phosphoribosyltransferase | mhp266 | MHP7448_0114 | MHJ_0110 | Fibronectin, heparin | Y | [ |
| Adhesin like-protein P146 | mhp684 | MHP7448_0663 | MHJ_0663 | Fibronectin, plasminogen, heparin, porcine epithelial cilia | Y | [ |
| ATP-dependent zinc metalloprotease FtsH | mhp175 | MHP7448_0206 | MHJ_0202 | Fibronectin, heparin | Y | [ |
| Chaperone protein DnaK (HSP70) | mhp072 | MHP7448_0067 | MHJ_0063 | Fibronectin, heparin | Y | [ |
| Dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase | mhp504 | MHP7448_0507 | MHJ_0504 | Fibronectin, heparin | Y | [ |
| Elongation factor Tu (EfTu) | mhp540 | MHP7448_0523 | MHJ_0524 | Fibronectin, heparin | Y | [ |
| Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase | mhp036 | MHP7448_0035 | MHJ_0031 | Fibronectin | Y | [ |
| Hexulose-6-phosphate synthase | mhp441 | MHP7448_0438 | MHJ_0436 | Heparin | Y | [ |
| L-lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) | mhp245 | MHP7448_0137 | MHJ_0133 | Fibronectin, heparin | Y | [ |
| Leucyl aminopeptidase | mhp462 | MHP7448_0464 | MHJ_0461 | Plasminogen, heparin | Y | [ |
| Lipoprotein | mhp390 | MHP7448_0378 | MHJ_0374 | Porcine epithelial cilia | NR | [ |
| Lppt protein | mhp384 | MHP7448_0372 | MHJ_0368 | Heparin, porcine epithelial cilia | Y | [ |
| M42 glutamyl aminopeptidase | mhp252 | MHP7448_0129 | MHJ_0125 | Plasminogen, heparin | Y | [ |
| Oligoendopeptidase F | mhp520 | MHP7448_0521 | MHJ_0522 | Heparin | Y | [ |
| P97-copy 1 | mhp183 | MHP7448_0198 | MHJ_0194 | Fibronectin, plasminogen, heparin, porcine epithelial cilia | Y | [ |
| P102-copy 1 | mhp182 | MHP7448_0199 | MHJ_0195 | Fibronectin, plasminogen, porcine epithelial cilia | Y | [ |
| P97-copy 2 | mhp271 | MHP7448_0108 | MHJ_0105 | Fibronectin, heparin, porcine epithelial cilia | Y | [ |
| P102-copy 2 d | mhp272 | MHP7448_0107 | MHJ_0104 | ND | NR | [ |
| P97-like protein | mhp107 | MHP7448_0272 | MHJ_0264 | Fibronectin, plasminogen, heparin, porcine epithelial cilia | Y | [ |
| P102-like protein | mhp108 | MHP7448_0271 | MHJ_0263 | Fibronectin, plasminogen, porcine epithelial cilia | Y | [ |
| Periplasmic sugar-binding protein | mhp145 | MHP7448_0234 | MHJ_0227 | Fibronectin, heparin | Y | [ |
| Putative MgpA like-protein d | mhp005 | MHP7448_0005 | MHJ_0005 | ND | NR | [ |
| Putative P76 membrane protein (P159) | mhp494 | MHP7448_0497 | MHJ_0494 | Fibronectin, heparin, porcine epithelial cilia | Y | [ |
| Putative P216 surface protein | mhp493 | MHP7448_0496 | MHJ_0493 | Heparin, porcine epithelial cilia | Y | [ |
| Putative prolipoprotein P65 | mhp677 | MHP7448_0656 | MHJ_0656 | Fibronectin, heparin | Y | [ |
| Pyruvate dehydrogenase | mhp264 | MHP7448_0116 | MHJ_0112 | Fibronectin, heparin | Y | [ |
| Pyruvate dehydrogenase E1-alpha subunit | mhp265 | MHP7448_0115 | MHJ_0111 | Fibronectin, heparin | Y | [ |
| Uncharacterized protein | mhp009 | MHP7448_0009 | MHJ_0009 | Heparin | Y | [ |
| Uncharacterized protein | mhp165 | MHP7448_0216 | MHJ_0212 | Heparin | Y | [ |
| Uncharacterized protein | mhp347 | MHP7448_0335 | MHJ_0326 | Fibronectin, heparin | Y | [ |
| Uncharacterized protein | mhp385 | MHP7448_0373 | MHJ_0369 | Heparin, porcine epithelial cilia | Y | [ |
| Uncharacterized protein | mhp683 | MHP7448_0662 | MHJ_0662 | Heparin, porcine epithelial cilia | Y | [ |
aNCBI accession numbers corresponding to the genes annotated in the M. hyopneumoniae 232, 7448 and J (RefSeq NC_006360.1, NC_007332.1 and NC_007295.1, respectively).
bHost ligands according to published data available for at least one M. hyopneumoniae strain; ND, not determined.
cEndoproteolytic processing with published experimental evidence available for at least one M. hyopneumoniae strain. Y, yes; NR, not reported.
dP102 copy-2 and putative MgpA-like protein adhesins were predicted as such based on their paralogy/orthology with M. hyopneumoniae P102 copy-1 and Mycoplasma genitalium MgPa adhesins, respectively.
Putative virulence factors found in the M. hyopneumoniae secretome and/or surfaceome
| Protein name | Function associated to pathogenicity b | Subcellular localization c | References | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 232 | 7448 | J | ||||
| 46 kDa surface antigen (p46) | mhp511 | MHP7448_0513 | MHJ_0511 | Adhesion | Se/Su | [ |
| Adhesin like-protein P146 | mhp684 | MHP7448_0663 | MHJ_0663 | Adhesion | Se/Su | [ |
| Aminopeptidase | mhp252 | MHP7448_0129 | MHJ_0125 | Proteolytic processing, immunomodulation, adhesion | Su | [ |
| ATP-dependent protease binding protein | mhp278 | MHP7448_0101 | MHJ_0098 | Heat shock protein, proteolytic processing | Su | [ |
| ATP-dependent zinc metalloprotease FtsH | mhp175 | MHP7448_0206 | MHJ_0202 | Proteolytic processing, adhesion | Su | [ |
| Chaperone protein DnaJ | mhp073 | MHP7448_0068 | MHJ_0064 | Chaperone, post-translational processing | Su | [ |
| Elongation factor Tu (EfTu) | mhp540 | MHP7448_0523 | MHJ_0524 | Immunomodulation, adhesion | Su | [ |
| Hemolysin C | mhp663 | MHP7448_0643 | MHJ_0643 | Cytotoxicity | Su | [ |
| Leucyl aminopeptidase | mhp462 | MHP7448_0464 | MHJ_0461 | Proteolytic processing, adhesion | Su | [ |
| Lipoprotein | mhp164 | MHP7448_0217 | MHJ_0213 | Cytotoxicity | Se/Su | [ |
| Lipoprotein | mhp502 | MHP7448_0505 | MHJ_0502 | Cytotoxicity | Se/Su | [ |
| Lipoprotein | mhp378 | MHP7448_0367 | MHJ_0363 | Cytotoxicity | Se/Su | [ |
| Lipoprotein | mhp345 | MHP7448_0333 | MHJ_0324 | Cytotoxicity | Su | [ |
| Lipoprotein | mhp377 | MHP7448_0366 | MHJ_0362 | Cytotoxicity | Su | [ |
| Lipoprotein | mhp379 | MHP7448_0368 | MHJ_0364 | Cytotoxicity | Su | [ |
| L-lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) | mhp245 | MHP7448_0137 | MHJ_0133 | Adhesion | Se/Su | [ |
| Lon protease (ATP-dependent protease La) | mhp541 | MHP7448_0524 | MHJ_0525 | Proteolytic processing | Su | [ |
| Lppt protein | mhp384 | MHP7448_0372 | MHJ_0368 | Adhesion | Se/Su | [ |
| Membrane nuclease, lipoprotein | mhp597 | MHP7448_0580 | MHJ_0581 | Surface nuclease, cytotoxicity, imunomodulation | Se/Su | [ |
| Oligoendopeptidase F | mhp520 | MHP7448_0521 | MHJ_0522 | Proteolytic processing, immunomodulation, adhesion | Su | [ |
| Outer membrane protein-P95 | mhp280 | MHP7448_0099 | MHJ_0096 | Surface antigen | Se/Su | [ |
| P102-copy 1 | mhp182 | MHP7448_0199 | MHJ_0195 | Adhesion | Se/Su | [ |
| P102-copy 2 d | mhp272 | MHP7448_0107 | MHJ_0104 | Adhesion | Se/Su | [ |
| p37-like ABC transporter substrate-binding lipoprotein | mhp371 | MHP7448_0360 | MHJ_0356 | Cytotoxicity | Su | [ |
| P60-like lipoprotein | mhp364 | MHP7448_0353 | MHJ_0348 | Cytotoxicity | Se/Su | [ |
| P97-copy 1 | mhp183 | MHP7448_0198 | MHJ_0194 | Adhesion | Se/Su | [ |
| P97-copy 2 | mhp271 | MHP7448_0108 | MHJ_0105 | Adhesion | Se/Su | [ |
| Phosphopentomutase | mhp221 | MHP7448_0161 | MHJ_0157 | DNA damage response | Su | [ |
| Protein GrpE (HSP-70 cofactor) | mhp011 | MHP7448_0011 | MHJ_0011 | Chaperone, post-translational processing | Se/Su | [ |
| Putative lipoprotein | mhp390 | MHP7448_0378 | MHJ_0374 | Cytotoxicity | Se/Su | [ |
| Putative lipoprotein | mhp640 | MHP7448_0621 | MHJ_0622 | Cytotoxicity | Su | [ |
| Putative MgpA like-protein d | mhp005 | MHP7448_0005 | MHJ_0005 | Adhesion | Se/Su | [ |
| Putative P216 surface protein | mhp493 | MHP7448_0496 | MHJ_0493 | Adhesion | Se/Su | [ |
| Putative P76 membrane protein (P159) | mhp494 | MHP7448_0497 | MHJ_0494 | Adhesion | Se/Su | [ |
| Putative prolipoprotein P65 | mhp677 | MHP7448_0656 | MHJ_0656 | Adhesion | Se/Su | [ |
| Signal-peptidase I | mhp028 | MHP7448_0026 | MHJ_0022 | Proteolytic processing, citotoxicity | Su | [ |
| Thiol peroxidase | mhp283 | MHP7448_0096 | MHJ_0093 | Antioxidant protection | Se | [ |
| Thioredoxin | mhp396 | MHP7448_0384 | MHJ_0380 | Antioxidant protection | Se | [ |
| Trigger factor | mhp233 | MHP7448_0149 | MHJ_0145 | Chaperone, post-translational processing | Se/Su | [ |
| XAA-PRO aminopeptidase | mhp680 | MHP7448_0659 | MHJ_0659 | Proteolytic processing, immunomodulation | Se | [ |
aNCBI accession numbers corresponding to the genes annotated in the M. hyopneumoniae 232, 7448 and J sequenced genomes (RefSeq NC_006360.1, NC_007332.1 and NC_007295.1, respectively).
bFunction(s) associated to pathogenicity predicted in silico or according to functional data available for at least one M. hyopneumoniae strain.
cSubcellular localization according to published proteomic data available for at least one M. hyopneumoniae strain. Se, secreted; Su, surface-displayed.
Figure 2.Schematic representation of host immune response modulation mediated by . M. hyopneumoniae infection elicits an acute inflammatory response in swine lungs, represented by a prominent infiltration and accumulation of immune cells that secrete pro-inflammatory cytokines and release ROS, triggering a microbicidal response. However, this pro-inflammatory microbicidal response causes damage to the host respiratory epithelium. Moreover, M. hyopneumoniae cells can persist in the respiratory tract modulating the host immune response, eliciting the secretion of anti-inflammatory cytokines by dendritic cells and macrophages, and inducing apoptosis on immune cells accumulated in the respiratory tract. The representation of M. hyopneumoniae cells attached to the ciliated respiratory epithelium is described in Figure 1
Figure 3.Schematic representation of host cell damage pathways induced by . M. hyopneumoniae cells interact with host ciliated epithelium causing cell damage through surface-displayed cytotoxic proteins and ROS release. These cytotoxic molecules can induce host cell death by triggering different pathways, including the apoptosis cascades associated with cytochrome C, caspase-3 and −8 (apoptosome), UPR, MAPK and NF-κB. Internalization of M. hyopneumoniae into a vesicle-like structure in the host cell cytosol and trafficking between the intra- and extracellular milieus are also represented. The representation of M. hyopneumoniae cells attached to the ciliated respiratory epithelium is described in Figure 1. ER, endoplasmic reticulum
Figure 4.Schematic representation of . Infection success depends on M. hyopneumoniae capacity to escape from the host mucociliary clearance and to adhere to ciliated cells of the porcine respiratory epithelium. Upon adhesion, M. hyopneumoniae causes ciliostasis and may form biofilms or invade host epithelial cells. M. hyopneumoniae also has a cytotoxic effect on host cells, causing cell damage and epithelial and immune cell death by apoptosis. This activity contributes to the modulation of the induced host immunological responses and may lead to lung lesions. Cell damage and epithelial cell death is also an outcome of host microbicidal and epithelial response to M. hyopneumoniae infection. Immunomodulation may also be associated with bacterial antigenic variation generated by proteolytic processing of surface adhesins and other surface proteins, and with the secretion of several virulence factors, as well as host pro-inflammatory peptides. During infection, M. hyopneumoniae may maintain its homeostasis using myo-inositol from lung tissue as an alternative carbon source. M. hyopneumoniae must also deal with stressing conditions, and its exposure to the host environment triggers the expression of several virulence factors. M. hyopneumoniae pathogenicity mechanisms, host response mechanisms and EP pathogenesis outcomes are shown in orange, green and red rectangles, respectively. Molecular processes and molecules involved in each mechanism or outcome are pointed out by gray arrows. Associations among M. hyopneumoniae pathogenicity mechanisms, host responses and EP pathogenesis outcomes are pointed out by black arrows