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Hypervirulent group A Streptococcus emergence in an acaspular background is associated with marked remodeling of the bacterial cell surface

Inactivating mutations in the control of virulence two-component regulatory system (covRS) often account for the hypervirulent phenotype in severe, invasive group A streptococcal (GAS) infections. As CovR represses production of the anti-phagocytic hyaluronic acid capsule, high level capsule product...

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Autores principales: Galloway-Peña, Jessica, DebRoy, Sruti, Brumlow, Chelcy, Li, Xiqi, Tran, Truc T., Horstmann, Nicola, Yao, Hui, Chen, Ken, Wang, Fang, Pan, Bih-Fang, Hawke, David H., Thompson, Erika J., Arias, Cesar A., Fowler, Vance G., Bhatti, Micah M., Kalia, Awdhesh, Flores, Anthony R., Shelburne, Samuel A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6281247/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30517150
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207897
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author Galloway-Peña, Jessica
DebRoy, Sruti
Brumlow, Chelcy
Li, Xiqi
Tran, Truc T.
Horstmann, Nicola
Yao, Hui
Chen, Ken
Wang, Fang
Pan, Bih-Fang
Hawke, David H.
Thompson, Erika J.
Arias, Cesar A.
Fowler, Vance G.
Bhatti, Micah M.
Kalia, Awdhesh
Flores, Anthony R.
Shelburne, Samuel A.
author_facet Galloway-Peña, Jessica
DebRoy, Sruti
Brumlow, Chelcy
Li, Xiqi
Tran, Truc T.
Horstmann, Nicola
Yao, Hui
Chen, Ken
Wang, Fang
Pan, Bih-Fang
Hawke, David H.
Thompson, Erika J.
Arias, Cesar A.
Fowler, Vance G.
Bhatti, Micah M.
Kalia, Awdhesh
Flores, Anthony R.
Shelburne, Samuel A.
author_sort Galloway-Peña, Jessica
collection PubMed
description Inactivating mutations in the control of virulence two-component regulatory system (covRS) often account for the hypervirulent phenotype in severe, invasive group A streptococcal (GAS) infections. As CovR represses production of the anti-phagocytic hyaluronic acid capsule, high level capsule production is generally considered critical to the hypervirulent phenotype induced by CovRS inactivation. There have recently been large outbreaks of GAS strains lacking capsule, but there are currently no data on the virulence of covRS-mutated, acapsular strains in vivo. We investigated the impact of CovRS inactivation in acapsular serotype M4 strains using a wild-type (M4-SC-1) and a naturally-occurring CovS-inactivated strain (M4-LC-1) that contains an 11bp covS insertion. M4-LC-1 was significantly more virulent in a mouse bacteremia model but caused smaller lesions in a subcutaneous mouse model. Over 10% of the genome showed significantly different transcript levels in M4-LC-1 vs. M4-SC-1 strain. Notably, the Mga regulon and multiple cell surface protein-encoding genes were strongly upregulated–a finding not observed for CovS-inactivated, encapsulated M1 or M3 GAS strains. Consistent with the transcriptomic data, transmission electron microscopy revealed markedly altered cell surface morphology of M4-LC-1 compared to M4-SC-1. Insertional inactivation of covS in M4-SC-1 recapitulated the transcriptome and cell surface morphology. Analysis of the cell surface following CovS-inactivation revealed that the upregulated proteins were part of the Mga regulon. Inactivation of mga in M4-LC-1 reduced transcript levels of multiple cell surface proteins and reversed the cell surface alterations consistent with the effect of CovS inactivation on cell surface composition being mediated by Mga. CovRS-inactivating mutations were detected in 20% of current invasive serotype M4 strains in the United States. Thus, we discovered that hypervirulent M4 GAS strains with covRS mutations can arise in an acapsular background and that such hypervirulence is associated with profound alteration of the cell surface.
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spelling pubmed-62812472018-12-20 Hypervirulent group A Streptococcus emergence in an acaspular background is associated with marked remodeling of the bacterial cell surface Galloway-Peña, Jessica DebRoy, Sruti Brumlow, Chelcy Li, Xiqi Tran, Truc T. Horstmann, Nicola Yao, Hui Chen, Ken Wang, Fang Pan, Bih-Fang Hawke, David H. Thompson, Erika J. Arias, Cesar A. Fowler, Vance G. Bhatti, Micah M. Kalia, Awdhesh Flores, Anthony R. Shelburne, Samuel A. PLoS One Research Article Inactivating mutations in the control of virulence two-component regulatory system (covRS) often account for the hypervirulent phenotype in severe, invasive group A streptococcal (GAS) infections. As CovR represses production of the anti-phagocytic hyaluronic acid capsule, high level capsule production is generally considered critical to the hypervirulent phenotype induced by CovRS inactivation. There have recently been large outbreaks of GAS strains lacking capsule, but there are currently no data on the virulence of covRS-mutated, acapsular strains in vivo. We investigated the impact of CovRS inactivation in acapsular serotype M4 strains using a wild-type (M4-SC-1) and a naturally-occurring CovS-inactivated strain (M4-LC-1) that contains an 11bp covS insertion. M4-LC-1 was significantly more virulent in a mouse bacteremia model but caused smaller lesions in a subcutaneous mouse model. Over 10% of the genome showed significantly different transcript levels in M4-LC-1 vs. M4-SC-1 strain. Notably, the Mga regulon and multiple cell surface protein-encoding genes were strongly upregulated–a finding not observed for CovS-inactivated, encapsulated M1 or M3 GAS strains. Consistent with the transcriptomic data, transmission electron microscopy revealed markedly altered cell surface morphology of M4-LC-1 compared to M4-SC-1. Insertional inactivation of covS in M4-SC-1 recapitulated the transcriptome and cell surface morphology. Analysis of the cell surface following CovS-inactivation revealed that the upregulated proteins were part of the Mga regulon. Inactivation of mga in M4-LC-1 reduced transcript levels of multiple cell surface proteins and reversed the cell surface alterations consistent with the effect of CovS inactivation on cell surface composition being mediated by Mga. CovRS-inactivating mutations were detected in 20% of current invasive serotype M4 strains in the United States. Thus, we discovered that hypervirulent M4 GAS strains with covRS mutations can arise in an acapsular background and that such hypervirulence is associated with profound alteration of the cell surface. Public Library of Science 2018-12-05 /pmc/articles/PMC6281247/ /pubmed/30517150 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207897 Text en © 2018 Galloway-Peña et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Galloway-Peña, Jessica
DebRoy, Sruti
Brumlow, Chelcy
Li, Xiqi
Tran, Truc T.
Horstmann, Nicola
Yao, Hui
Chen, Ken
Wang, Fang
Pan, Bih-Fang
Hawke, David H.
Thompson, Erika J.
Arias, Cesar A.
Fowler, Vance G.
Bhatti, Micah M.
Kalia, Awdhesh
Flores, Anthony R.
Shelburne, Samuel A.
Hypervirulent group A Streptococcus emergence in an acaspular background is associated with marked remodeling of the bacterial cell surface
title Hypervirulent group A Streptococcus emergence in an acaspular background is associated with marked remodeling of the bacterial cell surface
title_full Hypervirulent group A Streptococcus emergence in an acaspular background is associated with marked remodeling of the bacterial cell surface
title_fullStr Hypervirulent group A Streptococcus emergence in an acaspular background is associated with marked remodeling of the bacterial cell surface
title_full_unstemmed Hypervirulent group A Streptococcus emergence in an acaspular background is associated with marked remodeling of the bacterial cell surface
title_short Hypervirulent group A Streptococcus emergence in an acaspular background is associated with marked remodeling of the bacterial cell surface
title_sort hypervirulent group a streptococcus emergence in an acaspular background is associated with marked remodeling of the bacterial cell surface
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6281247/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30517150
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207897
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