Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center—Shreveport, Shreveport, Louisiana 71130
2. Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah 84602
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The human gastric pathogen
Helicobacter pylori
modifies host cholesterol via glycosylation and incorporates the glycosylated cholesterol into its membrane; however, the benefits of cholesterol to
H. pylori
are largely unknown. We speculated that cholesterol in the
H. pylori
membrane might alter the susceptibility of these organisms to membrane-disrupting antibacterial compounds. To test this hypothesis,
H. pylori
strains were cultured in Ham's F-12 chemically defined medium in the presence or absence of cholesterol. The two cultures were subjected to overnight incubations with serial 2-fold dilutions of 10 bile salts and four ceragenins, which are novel bile salt derivatives that mimic membrane-disrupting activity of antimicrobial peptides.
H. pylori
cultured with cholesterol was substantially more resistant to seven of the bile salts and three ceragenins than
H. pylori
cultured without cholesterol. In most cases, these cholesterol-dependent differences ranged from 2 to 7 orders of magnitude; this magnitude depended on concentration of the agent. Cholesterol is modified by glycosylation using Cgt, a cholesteryl glycosyltransferase. Surprisingly, a
cgt
knockout strain still maintained cholesterol-dependent resistance to bile salts and ceragenins, indicating that cholesterol modification was not involved in resistance. We then tested whether three putative, paralogous inner membrane efflux pumps, HefC, HefF, or HefI, played a role. While HefF and HefI appeared unimportant, HefC was shown to play a critical role in the resistance to bile salts and ceragenins by multiple methods in multiple strain backgrounds. Thus, both cholesterol and the putative bile salt efflux pump HefC play important roles in
H. pylori
resistance to bile salts and ceragenins.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
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