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The influence of regulatory proteins on the physiology and virulence of Streptococcus pneumoniae
(2015)
In conclusion, this work identifies the regulator ArgR2 as activator of the S. pneumoniae TIGR4 arginine deiminase system and arginine-ornithine transporter ArcD, which is needed for uptake of the essential amino acid arginine. Although ArgR2 activates ArcD expression and uptake of arginine is required to maintain pneumococcal fitness, the deficiency of ArgR2 increases TIGR4 virulence under in vivo conditions, suggesting that other factors regulated by ArgR2 counterbalance the reduced uptake of arginine by ArcD. Thus this works illustrates that the physiological homeostasis of pneumococci is complex and that ArgR2 plays a key role in maintaining bacterial fitness. Moreover, Rex was identified as a regulator of housekeeping genes including genes encoding glycolytic enzymes. In vitro studies and gene expression analyses suggested that the regulator Rex does not have an influence on the physiology of S. pneumoniae. However, a co-infection experiment demonstrated that Rex is involved in maintaining pneumococcal fitness and robustness under in vivo conditions.
Staphylococcus aureus is a pathogenic bacterium infecting the human host. It’s multifaced adaptation to various environmental conditions is mediated by a tight regulation of the virulence factors influencing the host’s immune system. In this thesis two regulators of gene expression were analysed: (i) the global influence of the two-component system SaePQRS and (ii) the regulation of superantigen gene expression by the alternative sigma factor σB. At the outset of this thesis, single target genes induced by SaeRS were known (hla, hlb, cap5, fnbA, coa). In order to get a general idea of the Sae-regulon, the influence of SaePQRS on gene-expression was analysed in two strain backgrounds by proteomics and transcriptomics aproaches. Recapitulatory, expression of at least 18 secreted and two covalently cell-wall bound proteins was decreased following inactivation of the Sae-system. Sae-dependently expressed were, amongst others, well decribed virulence factors like the y-hemolysins HlgA, HlgB, HlgC, LukM and LukF, the innate immune system modulating proteins Efb, CHIPS and SCIN-B as well as the enterotoxin SEB. SaeR acts as an activator of its target genes. Some proteins were detected in increased amounts in the extracellular proteome of the Sae-deficient strain. However, these changes did not occur at the transcriptional level. The expression of virulence factors is determined by other global regulators. No influence of SaePQRS on the transcription of five substancial regulators, namely the Agr-system and its effector molecule RNAIII, the alternative sigma factor σB, the two-component system ArlRS and the DNA-binding protein SarA, could be shown. In the second part of this thesis the issue was broached to the regulation of gene-expression of a subgroup of virulence factors, the superantigens (SAgs) of S. aureus by SaePQRS and σB. In contrast to their well described molecule structure and function, the regulation of their gene expression was largely unknown. Six different S. aureus strains (two laboratory strains and four clinical isolates) encoding one to seven SAg-genes each, were used for analysis of a total of twelve SAgs regarding their transcription and mitogenic activity. The transcriptional units were characterized using Northern-Blotting. The expression of SAgs could be correlated to the respective growth phase. While egc-SAgs were expressed mainly at low optical densities, seb was induced during late growth phase. In contrast, the transcription of sea, seh, sek, tst and sep remained constant and growth-phase independent. The transcriptional dataset was verified using T-cell proliferation assays. The expression of seh, tst and the egc-operon was dependent on σB. A potential σB-dependent promotor could be identified preceeding seo, the first gene of the egc-operon. In contrast, the expression of seb was increased in sigB-deficient background. This might be due to indirect effects. Expression of seb required SaePQRS. Transcriptional datasets were verified by Immuno-Blotting and T-cell-proliferation assays. In conclusion, the same mutation in sigB but in different strain backgrounds could result in opposite phenotypes with respect to their mitogenic activity. Besides well characterized virulence factors, some secreted proteins with so far unknown function belong to the Sae-regulon. Given that the influence of SaePQRS was restricted to virulence factors and induced especially modulators of the innate immune system, it can be assumed, that these proteins potentially play a role in virulence of S. aureus. In the third part of this thesis, one of these potential new virulence factors, namely SACOL0908, was analysed in detail. In cooperation with the group of Prof. Stehle, Tübingen, the crystal structure was solved. The protein folding of SACOL0908 is new with only minor similarities to described protein structures. Recombinantly expressed SACOL0908 binds to granulocytes. These cells belong to the innate immune system, incorporate bacteria by phagocytosis and kill them. The receptor for SACOL0908 on the surface of granulocytes could not be identified using immunoprecipitation, antibody-blocking assays and functional assays in cooperation with the group of Prof. Peschel, Tübingen. The gene encoding SACOL0908 was deleted in two S. aureus strain backgrounds (COL and Newman). These mutants are currently in use to characterize their phenotype in mouse-infection studies.
Streptococcus pneumoniae, more commonly known as the pneumococcus, is a Gram-positive bacterium colonizing the human upper respiratory tract as a commensal. However, these apparently harmless bacteria have also a high virulence potential and are known as the etiologic agent of respiratory and life-threatening invasive diseases. Dissemination of pneumococci from the nasopharynx into the lungs or bloodstream leads to community-acquired pneumonia, septicaemia and meningitis. Pneumococcal diseases are treated with antibiotics and prevented with polysaccharide-based vaccines. However, due to the increase of antibiotic resistance and limitations of the current vaccines, the burden of diseases remains high. Interactions of pneumococci with soluble host proteins or cellular receptors are crucial for adherence, colonization, transmigration of host barriers and immune evasion. The pneumococcal surface-exposed proteins are the main players involved in this host-pathogen interaction. Therefore, combating pneumococcal transmission and infections has emphasized the need for a new generation of immunogenic and highly protective pneumococcal vaccines, based on surface-exposed adhesins virtually expressed by all pneumococcal strains and serotypes. The genomic analysis of S. pneumoniae strains helped to identify pneumococcal virulence factors such as pili, PsrP and PavB, which have been demonstrated to interact with human proteins playing an important role during the pathogenic process of pneumococci, and are currently considered as new potential vaccine candidates against S. pneumoniae. A subclass of pneumococcal strains produces pili that are encoded by the pathogenicity islet pilus islet-1 (rlrA islet) and/or the pilus islet-2. Both types of pili are implicated in bacterial adherence to host cells. A further pathogenicity islet encoded protein is PsrP. The presence of the psrP-secY2A2 islet correlated positively with the ability of pneumococci to cause invasive pneumococcal diseases. Recent studies indicated that PsrP is a protective adhesin interacting with keratin 10 on lung epithelial cells. In this study, the genomic loci of the pneumococcal virulence factors pili, PsrP and PavB were molecularly analyzed and used as molecular markers for molecular epidemiology studies of S. pneumoniae. The genotyping results obtained here showed the impact of the PCV7 immunization of children, started in July 2006, on the distribution of these pneumococcal virulence factors among clinical isolates in Germany. These findings gave more insights into the role of pili, PsrP and PavB in pneumococcal pathogenesis and may strongly support the idea of including these pneumococcal constituents in a broad coverage protein-based vaccine against pneumococcal infections produced by invasive serotypes in the future. The mature PavB protein contains a variable number of repetitive sequences referred to as the Streptococcal Surface Repeats (SSURE). PavB has been demonstrated to interact with fibronectin and plasminogen in a dose-dependent manner and it was identified as a surface-exposed adhesin with immunogenic properties, which contributes to pneumococcal colonization and respiratory airways infections. The complete molecular analysis performed here for PavB, allowed to know more accurately its structure and to estimate the real number of SSURE units in different pneumococcal strains. With these findings, a new primary sequence-based structural model was constructed for the PavB protein and its SSURE domain, and, at least for TIGR4, the complete pavB gene and PavB protein sequences with five SSURE units was reported in the GenBank database of the NCBI website. Due to its immediate neighborhood on the pneumococcal genome with the tcs08 genes, PavB is likely linked with this pneumococcal TCS. Here, a significant reduction of the PavB protein expression was observed in delta-tcs08-mutant strains, which may strongly suggest that the TCS08 does play a role in pneumococcal virulence and metabolisme, as further observed in growth behaviour experiments carried out with the TCS08-deficient mutants, cultured in chemically defined medium. Despite several studies suggest that the molecular mechanism underlying the bacterial signal transduction is very sophisticated, the majority of reports in prokaryotic TCS, including those for S. pneumoniae, are still focused in single cognate pairs. The pneumococcal genome encodes 14 TCSs and an orphan response regulator. It is obvious that TCS pathways are often arranged into complex circuits with extensive cross-regulation at a variety of levels, thereby endowing cells with the ability to perform sophisticated information processing tasks. This study established also the experimental and molecular bases for the construction of a comprehensive genome-wide interaction map of the complex TCS pathways for its application in the gene regulation of pneumococcal virulence factors.
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is of paramount importance in the context of One Health, an integrated and unifying approach that aims to achieve a sustainable balance in the well-being of people, domestic and wild animals, plants, and their shared environments. Whenever bacteria become resistant to the therapeutic effects of antibiotics, they can cause infections that are difficult to treat effectively, increasing the risk of severe disease progression and death. Although AMR can develop naturally over time and is per se “ancient”, the excessive use of antibiotics in human and veterinary medicine over the past century has significantly accelerated its emergence and spread. Opportunistic Gram-negative enterobacteria, particularly Escherichia coli (E. coli ) and Klebsiella pneumoniae (K. pneumoniae) strains, increasingly exhibit resistance to multiple classes of clinically used antibiotics, thus presenting multidrug-resistant (MDR) phenotypes. To make matters worse, some of these strains combine multidrug resistance with high-level virulence, posing a threat to both immunocompromised and healthy individuals. Consequently, MDR E. coli and K. pneumoniae have been designated as high-risk pathogens by the World Health Organization, underscoring the urgent need for new antibiotic development.
This thesis is motivated by the fact that only a limited number of international high-risk clonal E. coli and K. pneumoniae lineages stand out across all One Health dimensions and dominate the broad pool of MDR enterobacteria. While we only know little about the underlying drivers and contributing factors impacting their occurrence, emergence, and adaptation across different ecologies, this thesis employs a diverse range of bioinformatics and phenotypic approaches to identify the key factors important for the success of these lineages, also in rather under-explored settings. It includes three main components: (i) the analysis of genomic survey data of MDR E. coli isolates from ecologies in sub-Saharan Africa, (ii) the application of functional genomics and phenotyping techniques to characterize bacterial virulence and assess its clinical relevance in a food-borne E. coli strain, and (iii) the investigation of evolutionary pathways that promote the development of resistance to a novel drug combination and exploring compensatory mechanisms in a K. pneumoniae strain. To achieve these objectives, this research integrates genomics and transcriptomics with molecular biology and functional studies encompassing a comprehensive set of in vitro and in vivo virulence and resilience assays to explore MDR bacteria in-depth.
We provide compelling evidence for the broad occurrence of successful high-risk clonal lineages in the One Health context and their circulation among clinics, wildlife, and food in international locations. In the first study, we isolated extended-spectrum β-lactamase (ESBL)-producing E. coli strains from houseflies collected from various wards at the University Teaching Hospital of Butare (Rwanda). In a follow-up study, we then examined in-depth the genomes of additional ESBL-producing E. coli from the same clinic and obtained from hospitalized patients, their caregivers, associated community members, and pets. The analyses revealed that the sample sets from this sub-Saharan African context consisted predominantly of globally recognized E. coli lineages, including sequence types (ST)131, ST167, ST410, and ST617. They play a pivotal role in the further dissemination and stabilization of AMR across diverse habitats within the One Health context. Moreover, our genomic results emphasize that these One Health-related high-risk clonal lineages exhibit the ability to successfully combine multidrug resistance with high-level bacterial virulence.
To gain a more detailed understanding of the sophisticated interplay of virulence and AMR, we developed and refined a set of in vitro and in vivo methods for virulence phenotyping. These methodologies enabled us to characterize pathogens based on crucial clinical aspects such as biofilm formation, siderophore secretion, resistance to complement-mediated killing, and their capacity to cause mortality in Galleria mellonella larvae. By using a food-borne E. coli strain from an internationally recognized high-risk clonal lineage, we verified the remarkable combination of a MDR phenotype with clinically significant virulence properties, including synthesis of curli fibers and cellulose as part of biofilm formation, extensive secretion of siderophores, resilience against complement-containing human serum and pronounced mortality in the infection model.
Nevertheless, the success of One Health-related high-risk clonal lineages does not rely solely on an “ideal” synergistic interplay between bacterial virulence and AMR. It also depends on their ability to rapidly mitigate the fitness costs associated with AMR acquisition, as these costs manifest in the form of reduced competitiveness and virulence in the absence of antibiotics. However, this is at odds with the observation of the global distribution of One Health-related high-risk clonal lineages across various One Health dimensions, even in environments with expectedly low selection pressures. To comprehensively address this, we conducted experimental evolution studies selecting for ceftazidime-avibactam-resistant mutants, which illuminated the rapid adaptations to changing environments. The adaptations and compensatory mechanisms were seemingly driven by major bacterial regulators, including the envelope stress response regulator RpoE on genomic and transcriptomic levels.
In conclusion, the results of this thesis shed light on the fundamental principles that govern the character and interplay between AMR and bacterial virulence and advance our understanding of the contributors and drivers of successful MDR international high-risk clonal lineages in the One Health context. This is also important for effective and alternative intervention strategies to prospectively further address the global threat of AMR.