Affiliation:
1. Department of Infectious Diseases, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee, USA
Abstract
The shortage of antibiotics against drug-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus
has led to the development of new drugs targeting the elongation cycle of fatty acid (FA) synthesis that are progressing toward the clinic. An objection to the use of FA synthesis inhibitors is that
S. aureus
can utilize exogenous FAs to construct its membrane, suggesting that the bacterium would bypass these therapeutics by utilizing host FAs instead. We developed a mass spectrometry workflow to determine the composition of the
S. aureus
membrane at the infection site to directly address how
S. aureus
uses host FAs.
S. aureus
strains that cannot acquire host FAs are as effective in establishing an infection as the wild type, but strains that require the utilization of host FAs for growth were attenuated in the mouse thigh infection model. We find that
S. aureus
does utilize host FAs to construct its membrane, but host FAs do not replace the requirement for pentadecanoic acid, a branched-chain FA derived from isoleucine (or leucine) that predominantly occupies the 2 position of
S. aureus
phospholipids. The membrane phospholipid structure of
S. aureus
mutants that cannot utilize host FAs indicates the isoleucine is a scarce resource at the infection site. This reliance on the
de novo
synthesis of predominantly pentadecanoic acid that cannot be obtained from the host is one reason why drugs that target fatty acid synthesis are effective in treating
S. aureus
infections.
Funder
HHS | NIH | National Institute of General Medical Sciences
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
32 articles.
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