| Literature DB >> 33803907 |
Irene Jurado-Martín1, Maite Sainz-Mejías1, Siobhán McClean1.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: Pseudomonas aeruginosa; adaptation; cystic fibrosis; diversity; genomics; lung environment; virulence factors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33803907 PMCID: PMC8003266 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22063128
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Schematic presentation of the main virulence factors used by P. aeruginosa during respiratory infections: (a) biofilm formation ability and composition of the extracellular matrix of biofilms (exopolysaccharides, proteins and extracellular DNA); (b) the three main quorum sensing (QS) systems (Las, Rhl and Pqs); (c) flagellins FliC and FliD incorporated within the flagellar structure; (d) pyoverdine (PVD) siderophore as an iron uptake system; (e) type 4 pili (T4P); (f) lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and outer membrane proteins (OMPs); (g) the type III secretion system (T3SS) and its four main effectors; (h) the type VI secretion system (T6SS); (i) the type II secretion system (T2SS) and the compounds it releases to the extracellular milieu: lytic enzymes (lipases, proteases (AprA ad PIV) and elastases (LasA and LasB)), exotoxin A (ETA), and pyocyanin.
Summary of the main P. aeruginosa outer membrane proteins (OMPs), their homologue in Escherichia coli when known, and the function they play in P. aeruginosa virulence.
| OMP in | Homolog in | Function | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| OprF | OmpA | Cell integrity maintenance | [ |
| Ion and saccharide acquisition | [ | ||
| Peptidoglycan binding | [ | ||
| Diffusion channel (toluene, siderophores, nitrates, nitrites) | [ | ||
| Adhesion (alveolar epithelial cells and other bacteria) | [ | ||
| Regulation of other virulence factors | [ | ||
| Immune system sensor | [ | ||
| OprH | OmpW family | Protein binding (SP-A and laminin) | [ |
| Aminoglycoside and polymyxin resistance | [ | ||
| Transport (hydrophobic molecules, amino acids, iron, and cations) | [ | ||
| OprD (OccD1) | OmpF | Laminin binding | [ |
| Carbapenem resistance | [ | ||
| Molecule transport (amino acids, peptides, gluconate) | [ | ||
| OprG | OmpW family | Laminin binding | [ |
| OprQ (OccD6) | Fibronectin binding | [ | |
| Adhesion (epithelial cells) | [ | ||
| OprL | Pal | Cell integrity maintenance | [ |
| Protection against oxidative stress | [ | ||
| OprI | Lpp | Cell integrity maintenance | [ |
| BamBDE | OM biogenesis | [ | |
| LptE | OM biogenesis | [ | |
| OprJMN | Antibiotic resistance | [ | |
| OmpBEG | Antibiotic resistance | [ |
Figure 2Representation of P. aeruginosa adaptation to the cystic fibrosis (CF) lung over the course of infection. In early stages, isolates are fully equipped with virulence factors that allow respiratory tract colonisation and lung injury. The stressful environment of the CF airway drives P. aeruginosa pathoadaptative changes that enable long-term colonisation and establishment of recalcitrant infections.
Examples of P. aeruginosa genomic evolution and adaptation studies.
| Type of Study | Source of Isolates | Main Findings | Frequently Mutated Genes | Function of Identified Mutated Genes | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| In vivo evolution study using whole genome sequencing | 474 longitudinal CF clinical isolates from 34 children and young individuals. | 36 lineages with convergent evolution in 52 genes | Host adaptation, AMR, and loss of extracellular virulence factors | [ | |
| In vivo evolution study of 17 AMR loci | 361, independent CF isolates collected from 30 CF centres. | 1112 sequence variants not present in the 20 most common PA clones | Unrelated. Translation, transport, LPS modification, and AMR | [ | |
| In vivo longitudinal and evolution analysis | 14 isolates from the same clonal lineage of a CF patient (20 years of the infection). | Evolution towards purifying selection. Different evolutionary pathways affecting genes of the same functional categories |
| Codification of β-lactamase and penicillin-binding protein 3 (AMR) | [ |
| In vitro biofilm and stationary-phase planktonic culture evolution study | 57 CIP-evolved populations and 35 control. | CIP-resistance development depends on bacterial lifestyle | Cell-wall recycling, TCA cycle, and arginine catabolism | [ | |
| Real-time in vivo evolution, metabolic and genomic study. | 26 from a single CF patient (8 years of infection). | Convergence at the phenotypic level but different mutational patterns | Not specified (functional grouping) | Amino acid transport and metabolism, defense, signal transduction and translation | [ |
| In vivo genome analysis (wgMLST) | 2 environmental, 1 veterinary and a CF clinical isolates with a defective Las QS system | Identification of ten highly discriminatory | T3SS and QS-regulated virulence traits. | [ | |
| Screening of 8 infection-relevant phenotypes (In vivo evolution) | 443 longitudinal isolates from 39 young cystic fibrosis patients over 10 years | Identification of phenotypic changes that deviate from expected evolutionary trajectories |
| Drug efflux pumps, mucoidity regulators, ciprofloxacin resistance | [ |
Abbreviations: AMR, antimicrobial resistance; CF, cystic fibrosis; CIP, ciprofloxacin; QS, quorum sensing; LPS, lipopolysaccharide; PA, P. aeruginosa; TCA, tricarboxylic acid cycle; T3SS, Type 3 secretion system; wgMLST, whole genome multi locus sequence typing.