| Literature DB >> 34649250 |
Sophie McKenna1, Kristin Krohn Huse2, Sean Giblin3, Max Pearson2, Mohammed Said Majid Al Shibar3, Shiranee Sriskandan2, Stephen Matthews1, James Edward Pease3.
Abstract
Bacteria possess the ability to evolve varied and ingenious strategies to outwit the host immune system, instigating an evolutionary arms race. Proteases are amongst the many weapons employed by bacteria, which specifically cleave and neutralize key signalling molecules required for a coordinated immune response. In this article, we focus on a family of S8 subtilisin-like serine proteases expressed as cell-envelope proteases (CEPs) by group A and group B streptococci. Two of these proteases known as Streptococcus pyogenes CEP (SpyCEP) and C5a peptidase cleave the chemokine CXCL8 and the complement fragment C5a, respectively. Both CXCL8 and C5a are potent neutrophil-recruiting chemokines, and by neutralizing their activity, streptococci evade a key defence mechanism of innate immunity. We review the mechanisms by which CXCL8 and C5a recruit neutrophils and the characterization of SpyCEP and C5a peptidase, including both in vitro and in vivo studies. Recently described structural insights into the function of this CEP family are also discussed. We conclude by examining the progress of prototypic vaccines incorporating SpyCEP and C5a peptidase in their preparation. Since streptococci-producing SpyCEP and C5a peptidase are responsible for a considerable global disease burden, targeting these proteases by vaccination strategies or by small-molecule antagonists should provide protection from and promote the resolution of streptococcal infections.Entities:
Keywords: Bacterial infection; Cell-envelope protease; Chemoattractants; Complement system; Streptococcus
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34649250 PMCID: PMC9082167 DOI: 10.1159/000516956
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Innate Immun ISSN: 1662-811X Impact factor: 7.111
Fig. 1Generation of anaphylatoxins C3a and C5a and subsequent degradations by CEPs. A schematic presentation of the common terminal complement system pathway. The production of anaphylatoxins C3a and C5a, depicted in orange, by the C3 convertases and C5 convertase remains central to the pathways, leading to the formation of the MAC. Pictured in the grey box is the cleavage of chemoattractants by CEPs and the resultant inability to bind and activate their respective receptors. CEPs, cell-envelope proteases; MAC, membrane attack complex; SpyCEP, Streptococcus pyogenes CEP. Adapted from Monk et al. [7]. Created with BioRender.com.
Fig. 2C5a and CXCL8 activate their receptors via distinct two-step models. a Cartoon of C5a derived from the PDB file 1KJS with N- and C-termini denoted. b Schematic diagram highlighting how the C-terminal portion of C5a inserts into the C5aR helical bundle to induce signalling. c Cartoon of CXCL8 derived from the PDB file 1IKL with N- and C-termini denoted. d Schematic diagram highlighting how the N-terminal portion of CXCL8 inserts into the C5aR helical bundle to induce signalling. In all panels, the portion of the chemoattractant coloured red marks the piece cleaved from the main body of the chemoattractant (blue) by the CEPs. CEPs, cell-envelope proteases. Generated with Protean 3DTM version 17.0.1, DNASTAR, Madison, WI.
Fig. 3Model for ScpA (a) and SpyCEP (b) export, processing, and maturation. a. ScpA: (1) The signal peptide (Sp) of ScpA is recognized, mediating protein translocation across the membrane, and removed. (2) Post-translocation, the anchoring domain (A) mediates covalent cell wall attachment through a sortase-dependent mechanism and ScpA autocatalytically removes its prosequence (PP), activating itself. (3) and (4) ScpA is liberated from the cell wall by either an uncharacterized enzymatic route or autocatalysis of the cell wall spanning region (W). b. SpyCEP: (1) The Sp of SpyCEP is recognized, mediating protein translocation across the membrane, and removed. (2) Post-translocation, the anchoring domain (A) mediates covalent cell wall attachment through a sortase-dependent mechanism and SpyCEP autocatalytically liberates the N- and C-terminal domains, producing the heterodimeric mature enzyme. (3) and (4) SpyCEP is liberated from the cell wall by either autocatalysis or an uncharacterized enzymatic route. SpyCEP, Streptococcus pyogenes cell-envelope protease. Created with BioRender.com.
Summary of functionally related chemotactic factors inactivating streptococcal CEPs
| Species | Protease | Substrate | Location | References |
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| Group A streptococcus | SpyCEP | CXCL1, CXCL2, CXCL3, CXCL5, CXCL6, CXCL7, and CXCL8 | Cell surface and released | [ |
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| ScpA | C5a, C3, and C3a | Cell surface and released | [ | |
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| Group B streptococcus | CspA | Fibrinogen and other chemokines | Cell surface and released | [ |
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| ScpB | C5a | Cell surface and released | [ | |
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| SeCEP | CXCL8 | Cell surface and released | [ |
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| ScpC | C5a (predicted) | Predicted cell surface | [ | |
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| SzoCEP or ScpC | CXCL8 | Cell surface and released | [ |
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| ScpZ | C5a (predicted) | Predicted cell surface | [ | |
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| ScpI | C5a | Cell surface and released | [ |
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| CepI | CXCL8 | Cell surface and released | [ | |
CEPs with characterized function have been included, but it must be noted that there is an abundance of S8 protease sequences that have been inferred from homology with SpyCEP and ScpA/ScpB, which require experimental confirmation. CEP, cell-envelope protease; SpyCEP, Streptococcus pyogenes CEP.
Fig. 4Structures of ScpA and SpyCEP. Structures of wild-type ScpA (3EIF) (a) and SpyCEP (5XYR) (d), coloured according to the domain architecture shown in (b, e), respectively. ConSurf analysis of ScpA (c) and SpyCEP (f). Sequences of the most closely related C5a and chemokine degrading CEPs were analysed to highlight regions of sequence conservation, then mapped onto the structures, and visualized according to the key. Regions that could not be analysed due to insufficient homologous data are shown in yellow. SpyCEP, Streptococcus pyogenes cell-envelope protease. Created with PyMol.
Fig. 5Phylogenetic tree of streptococcal CEPs. ConSurf analysis generated a scored list of related sequences for SpyCEP (5XYR), ScpA (3EIF), and ScpB (1XF1) [22, 87]. The 15 most related sequences were taken, with duplicates removed, for each protein and a phylogenetic tree generated using Clustal Omega [85]. Phylogenetic data were visualized using the Interactive Tree Of Life [88]. Sequences were blasted and denoted ScpA (grey shading) or ScpC (green shading) like owing to their homology (>50%) with C5 peptidase (ScpA) or SpyCEP (ScpC), respectively. CEPs, cell-envelope proteases; SpyCEP, Streptococcus pyogenes CEP.
Percentage sequence identity between functionally characterized CEPs
| CspA | − | ||||||||
| CepI | 42% | − | |||||||
| SpyCEP | 39% | 56% | − | ||||||
| SeCEP | 39% | 56% | 61% | − | |||||
| SzoCEP | 39% | 56% | 62% | 96% | − | ||||
| ScpC | 32% | 29% | 30% | 29% | 29% | − | |||
| ScpZ | 31% | 29% | 29% | 29% | 29% | 95% | − | ||
| ScpI | 32% | 31% | 32% | 31% | 31% | 32% | 32% | − | |
| ScpA | 34% | 33% | 34% | 34% | 33% | 38% | 38% | 38% | − |
| ScpB | 33% | 31% | 32% | 31% | 31% | 36% | 36% | 37% | 98% − |
CEP, cell-envelope protease; SpyCEP, Streptococcus pyogenes CEP.
Summary of studies using CEPs as vaccine antigens for immunization against streptococcal species
| Target | Vaccine | Model | Findings | Reference |
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| SpyCEP | Recombinant SpyCEP with alum adjuvant | IP immunisation with M1 GAS IN challenge | Increased survival after challenge | [ |
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| Recombinant SpyCEP with Freund's adjuvant | IP immunization followed by intranasal lethal challenge with M23 GAS of CD1 mice | Increased survival to 70% | [ | |
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| Recombinant SpyCEP with Freund's adjuvant | BALB/c mice immunized IM, followed by IM and IN challenge with GAS and | No reduction in bacterial burden at the site of infection. Decreased dissemination of GAS and | [ | |
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| Combo (SpyCEP, SpyAD, and streptolysin O) adjuvanted with Freund's or alum hydroxide | CD1 mice immunized IP, challenged with Ml, M6, M12, and M23 GAS | Cross serotype protection against GAS 50-80% survival following IN and IM challenge Decreased bacterial burden in subcutaneous air pouch infection Induced antibodies that mediated opsonophagocytic killing in whole blood assay | [ | |
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| SpyCEP with Freund's adjuvant | FVB/n mice immunized IM and IN challenge | Reduced signal of bioluminescent M75 GAS, but no difference in bacterial burden in the nasopharynx | [ | |
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| SpyCEP with J8-DT (M protein conserved epitope) | BALB/c mice immunized SC, GAS skin challenge following scarification | Protection against pyoderma and bacteraemia Protection against GAS hypervirulent CovRS mutants | [ | |
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| ScpA | Recombinant ScpA unadjuvanted | Intranasal immunization of CD1 mice, intranasal challenge with M1, M2, M6, M11, and M49 GAS | Reduced nasopharyngeal colonization | [ |
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| Recombinant ScpA adjuvanted with alum or monophosphoryl lipid A | SC immunization of CD1 mice, IN challenge with M49 and M1 GAS | ScpA-specific antibodies neutralized protease activity of ScpA and ScpB Increased clearance of GAS from lungs and nasal mucosa | [ | |
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| ScpA adjuvanted with cholera toxin | Intranasal immunization of BALB/c mice, intranasal challenge with M49 GAS | Reduction of colonization of nasal-associated lymphoid tissue Immunized sera gave passive protection against GAS IN infection in naïve mice | [ | |
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| SpyCEP and ScpA | Spy7 (ScpA, and 6 other highly conserved surface antigens) with Freund's adjuvant vs SpyCEP | FVB/n mice immunized IM, IM challenge with M1 and M3 GAS | Reduction in systemic dissemination | [ |
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| Combo 5 (ScpA, SpyCEP, arginine deaminase, streptolysin O, and trigger factor) with Alum adjuvant | IM immunization of rhesus macaques, M1 GAS IN challenge | Robust antigen-specific antibody response and reduction in both pharyngitis and tonsillitis following an M1 intranasal challenge | [ | |
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| ScpB | ScpB adjuvanted with alum and mycobacterial phospholipid, SC immunisation | CD1 mice, GBS serotype VI IN challenge | Reduced lung bacterial burden Conjugation of recombinant ScpB to a nonhomologous polysaccharide (III) can increase the immunogenicity of the polysaccharide when challenged with another serotype (VI) and reduced inflammatory damage to the lungs | [ |
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| ScpB encapsulated in biodegradable polymer | ICR mice immunized IN or IM, vaginal challenge | Strong IgG response after administration of ScpB by both intranasal and intramuscular routes, with an increased response when encapsulated Intranasal administration elicited a secretory IgA in the vaginal mucosa Mice immunized with encapsulated ScpB fully resisted vaginal colonization after exposure to serotype III GBS. Parental immunization conferred neonate protection | [ | |
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| SspA | SspA with ScpCL and 3 other | IN immunization of C57BL6/6JCnc mice, followed by IN, IP, or IV challenge with SS2, SS3, and SS7 serotype | Significantly reduced NALT bacterial burden Serotype-dependent protection against systemic dissemination Reduced mortality in mice given a lethal IV dose of SS2 | [ |
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| PrtA | PrtA with Freund's adjuvant | C3h/HeJ mice, SC immunisation and IP challenge | Mice were protected from lethal challenge of serotypes 6A and 6B but not 4 | [ |
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| PrtA with ISCOMATRIX | IM immunization of BALB/c and CBA/n mice, followed by IN challenge with serotype 3 or 8 | Reduced serotype 3 bacterial burden in the lungs of BALB/c mice Protected CBA/n mice from a lethal intranasal dose of serotype 3 Protective effect against non-lethal serotype 8 infection | [ | |
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| PrtA with Curdlan adjuvant | IN immunization of BALB/c mice, followed by IN challenge with serotype 2 | Increased PrtA-specific IgG and IgA levels in BALF and increased IgA levels in saliva and nasal washes Did not protect against acute pneumonia and systemic dissemination; no significant reduction in lung bacterial burden or blood multiplication | [ | |
CEPs, cell-envelope proteases; GAS, group A streptococcus; SpyCEP, Streptococcus pyogenes CEP.