4.7 Article

Capsule carbohydrate structure determines virulence in Acinetobacter baumannii

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PLOS PATHOGENS
卷 17, 期 2, 页码 -

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PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1009291

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资金

  1. National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [NIH/NIAID R01 AI130060, R42 AI106375, R01 AI117211, R21 AI132923-01]
  2. NIH/NIAID [R01 AI139052, R01 AI125363, AI134726-01]
  3. NIH [1R56AI129986-01]
  4. Department of Veterans Affairs VA Merit Review [1 I01 BX004677-01A1]

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The study found that a mobile DNA fragment in a capsule assembly gene led to the high virulence of Acinetobacter baumannii, while repairing the gene resulted in the virulent strain becoming avirulent, with a single sugar being crucial for innate immune cells recognition and phagocytosis. By comparing genomes of A. baumannii strains, a specific gene variation associated with virulence was identified, showing that loss of a single capsule assembly gene dramatically altered virulence by affecting interactions between bacteria and host immune system.
Author summary Acinetobacter baumannii is one of the most antibiotic-resistant pathogens in clinical medicine and is responsible for a significant number of deaths worldwide. We found that a highly virulent strain contained a mobile piece of DNA in one of its capsule assembly genes which rendered the gene inactive and thus removed a single sugar from the bacterium's complex outer carbohydrate capsule. When we inactivated the same gene in a non-virulent related strain, it became virulent, and when we repaired the non-functional gene the virulent strain became non-virulent. We then determined that this single sugar was critical for innate immune cells to recognize and phagocytose bacteria, and that the cells depended on the deposition of host complement proteins on the capsule to recognize the strains with this extra sugar. This finding provides new insight into A. baumannii pathogenesis and may inform the development of future therapies against this insidious pathogen. Acinetobacter baumannii is a highly antibiotic-resistant bacterial pathogen for which novel therapeutic approaches are needed. Unfortunately, the drivers of virulence in A. baumannii remain uncertain. By comparing genomes among a panel of A. baumannii strains we identified a specific gene variation in the capsule locus that correlated with altered virulence. While less virulent strains possessed the intact gene gtr6, a hypervirulent clinical isolate contained a spontaneous transposon insertion in the same gene, resulting in the loss of a branchpoint in capsular carbohydrate structure. By constructing isogenic gtr6 mutants, we confirmed that gtr6-disrupted strains were protected from phagocytosis in vitro and displayed higher bacterial burden and lethality in vivo. Gtr6+ strains were phagocytized more readily and caused lower bacterial burden and no clinical illness in vivo. We found that the CR3 receptor mediated phagocytosis of gtr6+, but not gtr6-, strains in a complement-dependent manner. Furthermore, hypovirulent gtr6+ strains demonstrated increased virulence in vivo when CR3 function was abrogated. In summary, loss-of-function in a single capsule assembly gene dramatically altered virulence by inhibiting complement deposition and recognition by phagocytes across multiple A. baumannii strains. Thus, capsular structure can determine virulence among A. baumannii strains by altering bacterial interactions with host complement-mediated opsonophagocytosis.

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