Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Acquisition of numerous virulence determinants affords
Staphylococcus aureus
greater pathogenicity than other skin-colonizing staphylococci in humans. Additionally, the metabolic adaptation of
S. aureus
to nonrespiratory conditions encountered during infection (e.g., hypoxia, nitric oxide, iron chelation) has been implicated as contributing to
S. aureus
virulence. Specifically,
S. aureus
has been shown to ferment glycolytic substrates in nonrespiratory environments encountered within the host. Here, we show that
S. aureus
has acquired unique carbohydrate transporters that facilitate the maximal uptake of host sugars and serve to support nonrespiratory growth in inflamed tissue. The carbohydrate substrates of 11
S. aureus
transporters were identified, and at least four of their genes encode
S. aureus
glucose transporters (
glcA
,
glcB
,
glcC
, and
glcU
). Moreover, two transporter genes (
glcA
and
glcC
) are unique to
S. aureus
and contribute disproportionately to the nonrespiratory growth of
S. aureus
on glucose. Targeted inactivation of sugar transporters reduced glucose uptake and attenuated
S. aureus
in a murine model of skin and soft tissue infections. These data expand the evidence for metabolic adaptation of
S. aureus
to invasive infection and demonstrate the specific requirement for the fermentation of glucose over all other available carbohydrates. Ultimately, acquisition of foreign genes allows
S. aureus
to adopt a metabolic strategy resembling that of infiltrating host immune cells: high glycolytic flux coupled to lactate excretion.
IMPORTANCE
The bacterial pathogen
Staphylococcus aureus
causes a wide range of human infections that are costly and difficult to treat.
S. aureus
differs from closely related commensal staphylococci in its ability to flourish following the invasion of deeper tissue from the skin surface. There,
S. aureus
primarily uses glucose to grow under respiration-limiting conditions imposed by the immune system. It was previously unclear how
S. aureus
thrives in this environment when other
Staphylococcus
species cannot. Our results provide evidence that
S. aureus
has acquired an expanded repertoire of carbohydrate transporters. In particular, four glucose transporters contribute to efficient
S. aureus
growth during infection. Thus,
S. aureus
has evolved to maximize its glucose uptake abilities for enhanced glycolytic flux during tissue invasion. This dependence on glucose acquisition for
S. aureus
virulence may also explain links between serious infectious complications associated with diabetic patients exhibiting elevated blood glucose levels.
Funder
HHS | NIH | National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
American Heart Association
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
95 articles.
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