Abstract
AbstractStaphylococcus aureusis a major opportunistic pathogen that is exposed to antimicrobial innate immune effectors and antibiotics that can disrupt its cell membrane. An understanding ofS. aureuslipid composition and its role in defending the cell against membrane-disrupting agents is of fundamental importance. Common methods for characterising lipid profiles suffer shortcomings such as low sensitivity of detection and inferior resolution of the positional assignments of fatty acid chains in lipids. This present study developed a rapid and sensitive nano-electrospray ionisation tandem mass spectrometry (nESI-MS/MS) method to characterise the lipid composition of three commonly studiedS. aureusisolates: Newman, Mu50 and BB270. Confirming previous studies, nESI-MS/MS revealed that phosphatidylglycerols were most abundant inS. aureusmembranes, while diglucosyldiacylglycerols and lysyl-phosphatidylglycerols were also detected. Positional assignments for individual fatty acid chains within these lipids were also determined. Concomitantly, gas chromatography mass spectrometry of the fatty acids validated the molecular characterization and showed the principal species present in each strain were predominately anteiso- and iso-branched chain fatty acids. Though the fatty acid and lipid profiles were similar between theS. aureusstrains, this method was sufficiently sensitive to distinguish minor differences in lipid composition. In conclusion, this nESI-MS/MS methodology can characterise the role of lipids in antimicrobial resistance, and may even be applied to the rapid diagnosis of drug-resistant strains in the clinic.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
11 articles.
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