Literature DB >> 33970534

Staphylococcus aureus ST228 and ST239 as models for expression studies of diverse markers during osteoblast infection and persistence.

Dafne Bongiorno1, Nicolò Musso2, Giuseppe Caruso3, Lorenzo Mattia Lazzaro1, Filippo Caraci3,4, Stefania Stefani1, Floriana Campanile1.   

Abstract

The ability of S. aureus to infect bone and osteoblasts is correlated with its incredible virulence armamentarium that can mediate the invasion/internalization process, cytotoxicity, membrane damage, and intracellular persistence. We comparatively analyzed the interaction, persistence, and modulation of expression of selected genes and cell viability in an ex vivo model using human MG-63 osteoblasts of two previously studied and well-characterized S. aureus clinical strains belonging to the ST239-SCCmecIII-t037 and ST228-SCCmecI-t041 clones at 3 h and 24 h post-infection (p.i). S. aureus ATCC12598 ST30-t076 was used as a control strain. Using imaging flow cytometry (IFC), we found that these strains invaded and persisted in MG-63 osteoblasts to different extents. The invasion was evaluated at 3 h p.i and persistence at 24 h p.i., in particular: ATCC12598 internalized in 70% and persisted in 50% of MG-63 cells; ST239-SCCmecIII internalized in 50% and persisted in 45% of MG-63 cells; and ST228-SCCmecI internalized in 30% and persisted in 20% of MG-63 cells. During the infection period, ST239-III exerted significant cytotoxic activity resulting from overexpression of hla and psmA and increased expression of the genes involved in adhesion, probably due to the release and re-entry of bacteria inside MG-63 cells at 24 h p.i. The lower invasiveness of ST228-I was also associated with non-cytotoxic activity inside osteoblasts. This clone was unable to activate sufficient cellular reaction and succumbed inside MG-63 cells. Our findings support the idea of considering new strategies, based on a translational approach-eukaryotic host-pathogen interaction (EHPI)-and to be applied on a large scale, to predict S. aureus /osteoblast interaction and treat bone infections. Such strategies rely on the study of the genetic and biochemical basis of both pathogen and host.
© 2021 The Authors. MicrobiologyOpen published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  MRSA; ST228; ST239; crosstalk mechanism; osteoblast; virulence toxin

Year:  2021        PMID: 33970534     DOI: 10.1002/mbo3.1178

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Microbiologyopen        ISSN: 2045-8827            Impact factor:   3.139


  1 in total

1.  Osteocytes Serve as a Reservoir for Intracellular Persisting Staphylococcus aureus Due to the Lack of Defense Mechanisms.

Authors:  Marina Garcia-Moreno; Paul M Jordan; Kerstin Günther; Therese Dau; Christian Fritzsch; Monika Vermes; Astrid Schoppa; Anita Ignatius; Britt Wildemann; Oliver Werz; Bettina Löffler; Lorena Tuchscherr
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2022-07-22       Impact factor: 6.064

  1 in total

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