Affiliation:
1. Department of Biology, Indiana University Bloomington (IUB), Bloomington, Indiana, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), including chemokines, are produced during infections to kill pathogenic bacteria. To fill in gaps in knowledge about the sensitivities of
Streptococcus pneumoniae
and related
Streptococcus
species to chemokines and AMPs, we performed a systematic, quantitative study of inhibition by chemokine CXCL10 and the AMPs LL-37 and nisin. In a standard Tris-glucose buffer (TGS), all strains assayed lacked metabolic activity, as determined by resazurin (alamarBlue) reduction, and were extremely sensitive to CXCL10 and AMPs (50% inhibitory concentration [IC
50
], ∼0.04 μM). In TGS, changes in sensitivities caused by mutations were undetectable. In contrast, strains that retained reductive metabolic activity in a different assay buffer (NPB [10 mM sodium phosphate {pH 7.4}, 1% {vol/vol} brain heart infusion {BHI} broth]) were less sensitive to CXCL10 and AMPs than in TGS. In NPB, mutants known to respond to AMPs, such as Δ
dlt
mutants lacking
d
-alanylation of teichoic acids, exhibited the expected increased sensitivity.
S. pneumoniae
serotype 2 strain D39 was much (∼10-fold) less sensitive to CXCL10 killing in NPB than serotype 4 strain TIGR4, and the sensitivity of TIGR4 was unaffected by the absence of capsule. Candidate screening of strain D39 revealed that mutants lacking Opp (Δ
amiACDEF
) oligopeptide permease were significantly more resistant to CXCL10 than the wild-type strain. This increased resistance could indicate that Opp is a target for CXCL10 binding or that it transports CXCL10 into cells. Finally, Δ
ftsX
or Δ
ftsE
mutants of
Bacillus subtilis
or amino acid changes that interfere with FtsX function in
S. pneumoniae
did not impart resistance to CXCL10, in contrast to previous results for
Bacillus anthracis
, indicating that FtsX is not a general target for CXCL10 binding.
IMPORTANCE
S. pneumoniae
(pneumococcus) is a human commensal bacterium and major opportunistic respiratory pathogen that causes serious invasive diseases, killing millions of people worldwide annually. Because of its increasing antibiotic resistance,
S. pneumoniae
is now listed as a “superbug” for which new antibiotics are urgently needed. This report fills in knowledge gaps and resolves inconsistencies in the scientific literature about the sensitivity of
S. pneumoniae
and related
Streptococcus
pathogens to chemokines and AMPs. It also reveals a new mechanism by which
S. pneumoniae
can acquire resistance to chemokine CXCL10. This mechanism involves the Opp (AmiACDEF) oligopeptide transporter, which plays additional pleiotropic roles in pneumococcal physiology, quorum sensing, and virulence. Taking the results together, this work provides new information about the way chemokines kill pneumococcal cells.
Funder
HHS | NIH | National Institute of General Medical Sciences
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
15 articles.
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