4.7 Article

Neuraminidase B controls neuraminidase A-dependent mucus production and evasion

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PLOS PATHOGENS
卷 17, 期 4, 页码 -

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PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1009158

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资金

  1. National Institute of Health [R37 AI038446, R21 AI50867, R01 AI50893]
  2. Cancer Center Support Grant at NYU Langone's Laura and Isaac Perlmutter Cancer Center [P30CA016087]
  3. Cancer Center Support Grant at the Laura and Isaac Perlmutter Cancer Center [P30CA016087]
  4. [S10 OD021747]

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The study explores the role of Streptococcus pneumoniae neuraminidases in evading mucociliary clearance and controlling mucus binding through enzymatic removal of sialic acid residues. The neuraminidases NanA and NanB interact to regulate mucus production and binding during colonization, providing new insights into the pathogen's mechanisms in host interaction.
Author summary Streptococcus pneumoniae (Spn) is a leading mucosal pathogen, whose host interaction begins with colonization of the upper respiratory tract. While there has been extensive investigation into bacterial interaction with epithelial cells, there is little understanding of bacterial-mucus interactions. Our study used mucus of human and murine origin and a murine model of colonization to study mucus associations involving Spn. The main findings reveal i) the enzymatic activity of Spn's neuraminidases (NanA and NanB) contribute to mucus evasion through removing terminal sialic acid, ii) the enzymatic activity of NanB controls expression of the main neuraminidase, NanA, and iii) Spn induces sialic acid containing mucus secretions in vivo in a neuraminidase-dependent manner. We postulate that during colonization, neuraminidase-dependent reduction in mucus binding enables evasion of mucociliary clearance, which is necessary to counter neuraminidase-mediated stimulation of mucus secretions. Thus, our study provides new insights into the role of Spn neuraminidases on colonization. Binding of Streptococcus pneumoniae (Spn) to nasal mucus leads to entrapment and clearance via mucociliary activity during colonization. To identify Spn factors allowing for evasion of mucus binding, we used a solid-phase adherence assay with immobilized mucus of human and murine origin. Spn bound large mucus particles through interactions with carbohydrate moieties. Mutants lacking neuraminidase A (nanA) or neuraminidase B (nanB) showed increased mucus binding that correlated with diminished removal of terminal sialic acid residues on bound mucus. The non-additive activity of the two enzymes raised the question why Spn expresses two neuraminidases and suggested they function in the same pathway. Transcriptional analysis demonstrated expression of nanA depends on the enzymatic function of NanB. As transcription of nanA is increased in the presence of sialic acid, our findings suggest that sialic acid liberated from host glycoconjugates by the secreted enzyme NanB induces the expression of the cell-associated enzyme NanA. The absence of detectable mucus desialylation in the nanA mutant, in which NanB is still expressed, suggests that NanA is responsible for the bulk of the modification of host glycoconjugates. Thus, our studies describe a functional role for NanB in sialic acid sensing in the host. The contribution of the neuraminidases in vivo was then assessed in a murine model of colonization. Although mucus-binding mutants showed an early advantage, this was only observed in a competitive infection, suggesting a complex role of neuraminidases. Histologic examination of the upper respiratory tract demonstrated that Spn stimulates mucus production in a neuraminidase-dependent manner. Thus, an increase production of mucus containing secretions appears to be balanced, in vivo, by decreased mucus binding. We postulate that through the combined activity of its neuraminidases, Spn evades mucus binding and mucociliary clearance, which is needed to counter neuraminidase-mediated stimulation of mucus secretions.

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