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Identification of distinct impacts of CovS inactivation on the transcriptome of acapsular group A streptococci

Group A streptococcal (GAS) strains causing severe, invasive infections often have mutations in the control of virulence two-component regulatory system (CovRS) which represses capsule production, and high-level capsule production is considered critical to the GAS hypervirulent phenotype. Additional...

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Autores principales: DebRoy, Sruti, Shropshire, William C., Vega, Luis, Tran, Chau, Horstmann, Nicola, Mukherjee, Piyali, Selvaraj-Anand, Selvalakshmi, Tran, Truc T., Bremer, Jordan, Gohel, Marc, Arias, Cesar A., Flores, Anthony R., Shelburne, Samuel A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10470059/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37358280
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/msystems.00227-23
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author DebRoy, Sruti
Shropshire, William C.
Vega, Luis
Tran, Chau
Horstmann, Nicola
Mukherjee, Piyali
Selvaraj-Anand, Selvalakshmi
Tran, Truc T.
Bremer, Jordan
Gohel, Marc
Arias, Cesar A.
Flores, Anthony R.
Shelburne, Samuel A.
author_facet DebRoy, Sruti
Shropshire, William C.
Vega, Luis
Tran, Chau
Horstmann, Nicola
Mukherjee, Piyali
Selvaraj-Anand, Selvalakshmi
Tran, Truc T.
Bremer, Jordan
Gohel, Marc
Arias, Cesar A.
Flores, Anthony R.
Shelburne, Samuel A.
author_sort DebRoy, Sruti
collection PubMed
description Group A streptococcal (GAS) strains causing severe, invasive infections often have mutations in the control of virulence two-component regulatory system (CovRS) which represses capsule production, and high-level capsule production is considered critical to the GAS hypervirulent phenotype. Additionally, based on studies in emm1 GAS, hyperencapsulation is thought to limit transmission of CovRS-mutated strains by reducing GAS adherence to mucosal surfaces. It has recently been identified that about 30% of invasive GAS strains lacks capsule, but there are limited data regarding the impact of CovS inactivation in such acapsular strains. Using publicly available complete genomes (n = 2,455) of invasive GAS strains, we identified similar rates of CovRS inactivation and limited evidence for transmission of CovRS-mutated isolates for both encapsulated and acapsular emm types. Relative to encapsulated GAS, CovS transcriptomes of the prevalent acapsular emm types emm28, emm87, and emm89 revealed unique impacts such as increased transcript levels of genes in the emm/mga region along with decreased transcript levels of pilus operon-encoding genes and the streptokinase-encoding gene ska. CovS inactivation in emm87 and emm89 strains, but not emm28, increased GAS survival in human blood. Moreover, CovS inactivation in acapsular GAS reduced adherence to host epithelial cells. These data suggest that the hypervirulence induced by CovS inactivation in acapsular GAS follows distinct pathways from the better studied encapsulated strains and that factors other than hyperencapsulation may account for the lack of transmission of CovRS-mutated strains. IMPORTANCE: Devastating infections due to group A streptococci (GAS) tend to occur sporadically and are often caused by strains that contain mutations in the control of virulence regulatory system (CovRS). In well-studied emm1 GAS, the increased production of capsule induced by CovRS mutation is considered key to both hypervirulence and limited transmissibility by interfering with proteins that mediate attachment to eukaryotic cells. Herein, we show that the rates of covRS mutations and genetic clustering of CovRS-mutated isolates are independent of capsule status. Moreover, we found that CovS inactivation in multiple acapsular GAS emm types results in dramatically altered transcript levels of a diverse array of cell-surface protein-encoding genes and a unique transcriptome relative to encapsulated GAS. These data provide new insights into how a major human pathogen achieves hypervirulence and indicate that factors other than hyperencapsulation likely account for the sporadic nature of the severe GAS disease.
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spelling pubmed-104700592023-09-01 Identification of distinct impacts of CovS inactivation on the transcriptome of acapsular group A streptococci DebRoy, Sruti Shropshire, William C. Vega, Luis Tran, Chau Horstmann, Nicola Mukherjee, Piyali Selvaraj-Anand, Selvalakshmi Tran, Truc T. Bremer, Jordan Gohel, Marc Arias, Cesar A. Flores, Anthony R. Shelburne, Samuel A. mSystems Research Article Group A streptococcal (GAS) strains causing severe, invasive infections often have mutations in the control of virulence two-component regulatory system (CovRS) which represses capsule production, and high-level capsule production is considered critical to the GAS hypervirulent phenotype. Additionally, based on studies in emm1 GAS, hyperencapsulation is thought to limit transmission of CovRS-mutated strains by reducing GAS adherence to mucosal surfaces. It has recently been identified that about 30% of invasive GAS strains lacks capsule, but there are limited data regarding the impact of CovS inactivation in such acapsular strains. Using publicly available complete genomes (n = 2,455) of invasive GAS strains, we identified similar rates of CovRS inactivation and limited evidence for transmission of CovRS-mutated isolates for both encapsulated and acapsular emm types. Relative to encapsulated GAS, CovS transcriptomes of the prevalent acapsular emm types emm28, emm87, and emm89 revealed unique impacts such as increased transcript levels of genes in the emm/mga region along with decreased transcript levels of pilus operon-encoding genes and the streptokinase-encoding gene ska. CovS inactivation in emm87 and emm89 strains, but not emm28, increased GAS survival in human blood. Moreover, CovS inactivation in acapsular GAS reduced adherence to host epithelial cells. These data suggest that the hypervirulence induced by CovS inactivation in acapsular GAS follows distinct pathways from the better studied encapsulated strains and that factors other than hyperencapsulation may account for the lack of transmission of CovRS-mutated strains. IMPORTANCE: Devastating infections due to group A streptococci (GAS) tend to occur sporadically and are often caused by strains that contain mutations in the control of virulence regulatory system (CovRS). In well-studied emm1 GAS, the increased production of capsule induced by CovRS mutation is considered key to both hypervirulence and limited transmissibility by interfering with proteins that mediate attachment to eukaryotic cells. Herein, we show that the rates of covRS mutations and genetic clustering of CovRS-mutated isolates are independent of capsule status. Moreover, we found that CovS inactivation in multiple acapsular GAS emm types results in dramatically altered transcript levels of a diverse array of cell-surface protein-encoding genes and a unique transcriptome relative to encapsulated GAS. These data provide new insights into how a major human pathogen achieves hypervirulence and indicate that factors other than hyperencapsulation likely account for the sporadic nature of the severe GAS disease. American Society for Microbiology 2023-06-26 /pmc/articles/PMC10470059/ /pubmed/37358280 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/msystems.00227-23 Text en Copyright © 2023 DebRoy et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
DebRoy, Sruti
Shropshire, William C.
Vega, Luis
Tran, Chau
Horstmann, Nicola
Mukherjee, Piyali
Selvaraj-Anand, Selvalakshmi
Tran, Truc T.
Bremer, Jordan
Gohel, Marc
Arias, Cesar A.
Flores, Anthony R.
Shelburne, Samuel A.
Identification of distinct impacts of CovS inactivation on the transcriptome of acapsular group A streptococci
title Identification of distinct impacts of CovS inactivation on the transcriptome of acapsular group A streptococci
title_full Identification of distinct impacts of CovS inactivation on the transcriptome of acapsular group A streptococci
title_fullStr Identification of distinct impacts of CovS inactivation on the transcriptome of acapsular group A streptococci
title_full_unstemmed Identification of distinct impacts of CovS inactivation on the transcriptome of acapsular group A streptococci
title_short Identification of distinct impacts of CovS inactivation on the transcriptome of acapsular group A streptococci
title_sort identification of distinct impacts of covs inactivation on the transcriptome of acapsular group a streptococci
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10470059/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37358280
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/msystems.00227-23
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