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Multidimensional Proteome Profiling of Blood-Brain Barrier Perturbation by Group B Streptococcus

Group B Streptococcus (GBS) remains the leading cause of neonatal meningitis, a disease associated with high rates of adverse neurological sequelae. The in vivo relationship between GBS and brain tissues remains poorly characterized, partly because past studies had focused on microbial rather than h...

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Autores principales: Campeau, Anaamika, Mills, Robert H., Blanchette, Marie, Bajc, Kaja, Malfavon, Mario, Munji, Roeben N., Deng, Liwen, Hancock, Bryan, Patras, Kathryn A., Olson, Joshua, Nizet, Victor, Daneman, Richard, Doran, Kelly, Gonzalez, David J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7449606/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32843537
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00368-20
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author Campeau, Anaamika
Mills, Robert H.
Blanchette, Marie
Bajc, Kaja
Malfavon, Mario
Munji, Roeben N.
Deng, Liwen
Hancock, Bryan
Patras, Kathryn A.
Olson, Joshua
Nizet, Victor
Daneman, Richard
Doran, Kelly
Gonzalez, David J.
author_facet Campeau, Anaamika
Mills, Robert H.
Blanchette, Marie
Bajc, Kaja
Malfavon, Mario
Munji, Roeben N.
Deng, Liwen
Hancock, Bryan
Patras, Kathryn A.
Olson, Joshua
Nizet, Victor
Daneman, Richard
Doran, Kelly
Gonzalez, David J.
author_sort Campeau, Anaamika
collection PubMed
description Group B Streptococcus (GBS) remains the leading cause of neonatal meningitis, a disease associated with high rates of adverse neurological sequelae. The in vivo relationship between GBS and brain tissues remains poorly characterized, partly because past studies had focused on microbial rather than host processes. Additionally, the field has not capitalized on systems-level technologies to probe the host-pathogen relationship. Here, we use multiplexed quantitative proteomics to investigate the effect of GBS infection in the murine brain at various levels of tissue complexity, beginning with the whole organ and moving to brain vascular substructures. Infected whole brains showed classical signatures associated with the acute-phase response. In isolated brain microvessels, classical blood-brain barrier proteins were unaltered, but interferon signaling and leukocyte recruitment proteins were upregulated. The choroid plexus showed increases in peripheral immune cell proteins. Proteins that increased in abundance in the vasculature during GBS invasion were associated with major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I antigen processing and endoplasmic reticulum dysfunction, a finding which correlated with altered host protein glycosylation profiles. Globally, there was low concordance between the infection proteome of whole brains and isolated vascular tissues. This report underscores the utility of unbiased, systems-scale analyses of functional tissue substructures for understanding disease. IMPORTANCE Group B Streptococcus (GBS) meningitis remains a major cause of poor health outcomes very early in life. Both the host-pathogen relationship leading to disease and the massive host response to infection contributing to these poor outcomes are orchestrated at the tissue and cell type levels. GBS meningitis is thought to result when bacteria present in the blood circumvent the selectively permeable vascular barriers that feed the brain. Additionally, tissue damage subsequent to bacterial invasion is mediated by inflammation and by immune cells from the periphery crossing the blood-brain barrier. Indeed, the vasculature plays a central role in disease processes occurring during GBS infection of the brain. Here, we employed quantitative proteomic analysis of brain vascular substructures during invasive GBS disease. We used the generated data to map molecular alterations associated with tissue perturbation, finding widespread intracellular dysfunction and punctuating the importance of investigations relegated to tissue type over the whole organ.
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spelling pubmed-74496062020-09-02 Multidimensional Proteome Profiling of Blood-Brain Barrier Perturbation by Group B Streptococcus Campeau, Anaamika Mills, Robert H. Blanchette, Marie Bajc, Kaja Malfavon, Mario Munji, Roeben N. Deng, Liwen Hancock, Bryan Patras, Kathryn A. Olson, Joshua Nizet, Victor Daneman, Richard Doran, Kelly Gonzalez, David J. mSystems Research Article Group B Streptococcus (GBS) remains the leading cause of neonatal meningitis, a disease associated with high rates of adverse neurological sequelae. The in vivo relationship between GBS and brain tissues remains poorly characterized, partly because past studies had focused on microbial rather than host processes. Additionally, the field has not capitalized on systems-level technologies to probe the host-pathogen relationship. Here, we use multiplexed quantitative proteomics to investigate the effect of GBS infection in the murine brain at various levels of tissue complexity, beginning with the whole organ and moving to brain vascular substructures. Infected whole brains showed classical signatures associated with the acute-phase response. In isolated brain microvessels, classical blood-brain barrier proteins were unaltered, but interferon signaling and leukocyte recruitment proteins were upregulated. The choroid plexus showed increases in peripheral immune cell proteins. Proteins that increased in abundance in the vasculature during GBS invasion were associated with major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I antigen processing and endoplasmic reticulum dysfunction, a finding which correlated with altered host protein glycosylation profiles. Globally, there was low concordance between the infection proteome of whole brains and isolated vascular tissues. This report underscores the utility of unbiased, systems-scale analyses of functional tissue substructures for understanding disease. IMPORTANCE Group B Streptococcus (GBS) meningitis remains a major cause of poor health outcomes very early in life. Both the host-pathogen relationship leading to disease and the massive host response to infection contributing to these poor outcomes are orchestrated at the tissue and cell type levels. GBS meningitis is thought to result when bacteria present in the blood circumvent the selectively permeable vascular barriers that feed the brain. Additionally, tissue damage subsequent to bacterial invasion is mediated by inflammation and by immune cells from the periphery crossing the blood-brain barrier. Indeed, the vasculature plays a central role in disease processes occurring during GBS infection of the brain. Here, we employed quantitative proteomic analysis of brain vascular substructures during invasive GBS disease. We used the generated data to map molecular alterations associated with tissue perturbation, finding widespread intracellular dysfunction and punctuating the importance of investigations relegated to tissue type over the whole organ. American Society for Microbiology 2020-08-25 /pmc/articles/PMC7449606/ /pubmed/32843537 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00368-20 Text en Copyright © 2020 Campeau 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
Campeau, Anaamika
Mills, Robert H.
Blanchette, Marie
Bajc, Kaja
Malfavon, Mario
Munji, Roeben N.
Deng, Liwen
Hancock, Bryan
Patras, Kathryn A.
Olson, Joshua
Nizet, Victor
Daneman, Richard
Doran, Kelly
Gonzalez, David J.
Multidimensional Proteome Profiling of Blood-Brain Barrier Perturbation by Group B Streptococcus
title Multidimensional Proteome Profiling of Blood-Brain Barrier Perturbation by Group B Streptococcus
title_full Multidimensional Proteome Profiling of Blood-Brain Barrier Perturbation by Group B Streptococcus
title_fullStr Multidimensional Proteome Profiling of Blood-Brain Barrier Perturbation by Group B Streptococcus
title_full_unstemmed Multidimensional Proteome Profiling of Blood-Brain Barrier Perturbation by Group B Streptococcus
title_short Multidimensional Proteome Profiling of Blood-Brain Barrier Perturbation by Group B Streptococcus
title_sort multidimensional proteome profiling of blood-brain barrier perturbation by group b streptococcus
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7449606/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32843537
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00368-20
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