关键词: Shr Streptococcus pyogenes hemoprotein iron acquisition iron starvation laminin-binding virulence whole blood

Mesh : Animals Bacteremia / microbiology pathology Cells, Cultured Culture Media / chemistry Disease Models, Animal Epithelial Cells / microbiology Female Gene Knockout Techniques Gene Targeting Hemeproteins / metabolism Humans Iron / metabolism Keratinocytes / microbiology Mice Microbial Viability Neutrophils / microbiology Skin Diseases, Bacterial / microbiology pathology Streptococcal Infections / microbiology pathology Streptococcus pyogenes / growth & development metabolism pathogenicity Virulence Virulence Factors / metabolism

来  源:   DOI:10.4161/viru.21933   PDF(Sci-hub)

Abstract:
Streptococcus pyogenes (group A streptococcus, GAS) is a human bacterial pathogen of global significance, causing severe invasive diseases associated with serious morbidity and mortality. To survive within the host and establish an infection, GAS requires essential nutrients, including iron. The streptococcal hemoprotein receptor (Shr) is a surface-localized GAS protein that binds heme-containing proteins and extracellular matrix components. In this study, we employ targeted allelic exchange mutagenesis to investigate the role of Shr in the pathogenesis of the globally disseminated serotype M1T1 GAS. The shr mutant exhibited a growth defect in iron-restricted medium supplemented with ferric chloride, but no significant differences were observed in neutrophil survival, antimicrobial peptide resistance, cell surface charge, fibronectin-binding or adherence to human epithelial cells and keratinocytes, compared with wild-type. However, the shr mutant displayed a reduction in human blood proliferation, laminin-binding capacity and was attenuated for virulence in in vivo models of skin and systemic infection. We conclude that Shr augments GAS adherence to laminin, an important extracellular matrix attachment component. Furthermore, Shr-mediated iron uptake contributes to GAS growth in human blood, and is required for full virulence of serotype M1T1 GAS in mouse models of invasive disease.
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