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Chlamydia trachomatis, an obligate intracellular human pathogen, is the world’s leading cause of infection related blindness and the most common, bacterial sexually transmitted disease. In order to establish an optimal replicative niche, the pathogen extensively interferes with the physiology of the host cell. Chlamydia switches in its complex developmental cycle between the infectious non-replicative elementary bodies (EBs) and the non-infectious replicative reticulate bodies (RBs). The transformation to RBs, shortly after entering a host cell, is a crucial process in infection to start chlamydial replication. Currently it is unknown how the transition from EBs to RBs is initiated. In this thesis, we could show that, in an axenic media approach, L glutamine uptake by the pathogen is crucial to initiate the EB to RB transition. L-glutamine is converted to amino acids which are used by the bacteria to synthesize peptidoglycan. Peptidoglycan inturn is believed to function in separating dividing Chlamydia. The glutamine metabolism is reprogrammed in infected cells in a c-Myc-dependent manner, in order to accomplish the increased requirement for L-glutamine. Upon a chlamydial infection, the proto-oncogene c-Myc gets upregulated to promote host cell glutaminolysis via glutaminase GLS1 and the L-glutamine transporter SLC1A5/ASCT2. Interference with this metabolic reprogramming leads to limited growth of C. trachomatis. Besides the active infection, Chlamydia can persist over a long period of time within the host cell whereby chronic and recurrent infections establish. C. trachomatis acquire a persistent state during an immune attack in response to elevated interferon-γ (IFN-γ) levels. It has been shown that IFN-γ activates the catabolic depletion of L-tryptophan via indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO), resulting in the formation of non-infectious atypical chlamydial forms. In this thesis, we could show that IFN-γ depletes the key metabolic regulator c-Myc, which has been demonstrated to be a prerequisite for chlamydial development and growth, in a STAT1-dependent manner. Moreover, metabolic analyses revealed that the pathogen de routs the host cell TCA cycle to enrich pyrimidine biosynthesis. Supplementing pyrimidines or a-ketoglutarate helps the bacteria to partially overcome the persistent state. Together, the results indicate a central role of c-Myc induced host glutamine metabolism reprogramming and L-glutamine for the development of C. trachomatis, which may provide a basis for anti-infectious strategies. Furthermore, they challenge the longstanding hypothesis of L-tryptophan shortage as the sole reason for IFN-γ induced persistence and suggest a pivotal role of c-Myc in the control of the C. trachomatis dormancy.
Abstract
Background
HLA-G is a non-classical MHC class I molecule which exerts strong immunosuppressive effects on various immune cells. Several membrane-bound and soluble isoforms are known. Physiologically, HLA-G is predominantly expressed in the placenta, where it contributes to protecting the semi-allogeneic embryo from rejection by the maternal immune system. However, HLA-G is also often upregulated during tumourigenesis, such as in ovarian cancer. The aim of this thesis is to investigate how soluble HLA-G may contribute to local immunosuppression in ovarian carcinomas, and to characterize HLA-G expression in different ovarian carcinoma subtypes and metastases.
Results
As reported by others, physiological HLA-G expression is restricted to few tissues, such as placenta and testes. Here, HLA-G was also detected in the medulla of the adrenal gland. In contrast, HLA-G expression was frequently detected in tumours of all assessed subtypes of ovarian carcinomas (serous, mucinous, endometrioid and clear cell). Highest expression levels were detected in high-grade serous carcinomas. In primary tumours, expression of HLA-G correlated with expression of classical MHC class I molecules HLA-A, -B and -C. Surprisingly, high levels of HLA-G were also detected on dendritic cells in local lymph nodes. As no expression of HLA-G was inducible in monocytes or dendritic cells from healthy donors in response to IL-10 or IL-4, we speculated that tumour-derived soluble HLA-G might be transferred to dendritic cells via the lymphatic system. Accordingly, high levels of tumour-derived soluble HLA-G were detected in ovarian cancer ascites samples. In vitro, dendritic cells expanded in the presence of IL-4, IL-10 and GM-CSF (DC-10) were particularly prone to binding high amounts of soluble HLA-G via ILT receptors. Furthermore, HLA-G loaded DC-10 cells inhibited the proliferation of CD8 effector cells and induced regulatory T cells, even when the DC-10 cells had been fixed with paraformaldehyde.
Conclusion
The immunosuppressive molecule HLA-G is overexpressed in high-grade serous ovarian carcinomas, which account for the majority of ovarian cancers. In particular tumours with a high mutational burden and intact expression of classical, immunogenic MHC class Ia molecules may use HLA-G to escape from immunosurveillance. Additionally, tumour-derived soluble HLA-G may inhibit adaptive immune responses by binding to dendritic cells in local lymph nodes. Dendritic cells usually play a decisive role in the initiation of adaptive anti-tumour immune responses by presenting tumour antigens to cytotoxic T cells. In contrast, dendritic cells loaded with soluble HLA-G inhibit the proliferation of effector T cells and promote the induction of regulatory T cells. Thus, soluble HLA-G that is transferred to dendritic cells via lymphatic vessels may enable ovarian carcinomas to remotely suppress anti-tumour immune responses in local lymph nodes. This novel immune-escape mechanism may also exist in other solid tumours that express HLA-G.
Chlamydia trachomatis (Ct) is an obligate intracellular human pathogen. It causes blinding trachoma and sexually transmitted disease such as chlamydia, pelvic inflammatory disease and lymphogranuloma venereum. Ct has a unique biphasic development cycle and replicates in an intracellular vacuole called inclusion. Normally it has two forms: the infectious form, elementary body (EB); and the non-infectious form, reticulate body (RB). Ct is not easily amenable to genetic manipulation. Hence, to understand the infection process, it is crucial to study how the metabolic activity of Ct exactly evolves in the host cell and what roles of EB and RB play differentially in Ct metabolism during infection. In addition, Ct was found regularly coinfected with other pathogens in patients who got sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). A lack of powerful methods to culture Ct outside of the host cell makes the detailed molecular mechanisms of coinfection difficult to study.
In this work, a genome-scale metabolic model with 321 metabolites and 277 reactions was first reconstructed by me to study Ct metabolic adaptation in the host cell during infection. This model was calculated to yield 84 extreme pathways, and metabolic flux strength was then modelled regarding 20hpi, 40hpi and later based on a published proteomics dataset. Activities of key enzymes involved in target pathways were further validated by RT-qPCR in both HeLa229 and HUVEC cell lines. This study suggests that Ct's major active pathways involve glycolysis, gluconeogenesis, glycerolphospholipid biosynthesis and pentose phosphate pathway, while Ct's incomplete tricarboxylic acid cycle and fatty acid biosynthesis are less active. EB is more activated in almost all these carbohydrate pathways than RB. Result suggests the survival of Ct generally requires a lot of acetyl-CoA from the host. Besides, both EB and RB can utilize folate biosynthesis to generate NAD(P)H but may use different pathways depending on the demands of ATP. When more ATP is available from both host cell and Ct itself, RB is more activated by utilizing energy providing chemicals generated by enzymes associated in the nucleic acid metabolism. The forming of folate also suggests large glutamate consumption, which is supposed to be converted from glutamine by the glutamine-fructose-6-phosphate transaminase (glmS) and CTP synthase (pyrG).
Then, RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) data analysis was performed by me in a coinfection study. Metatranscriptome from patient RNA-seq data provides a realistic overview. Thirteen patient samples were collected and sequenced by our collaborators. Six male samples were obtained by urethral swab, and seven female samples were collected by cervicovaginal lavage. All the samples were Neisseria gonorrhoeae (GC) positive, and half of them had coinfection with Ct. HISAT2 and Stringtie were used for transcriptomic mapping and assembly respectively, and differential expression analysis by DESeq2, Ballgown and Cuffdiff2 are parallelly processed for comparison. Although the measured transcripts were not sufficient to assemble Ct's transcriptome, the differential expression of genes in both the host and GC were analyzed by comparing Ct positive group (Ct+) against Ct-uninfected group. The results show that in the Ct+ group, the host MHC class II immune response was highly induced. Ct infection is associated with the regulation of DNA methylation, DNA double-strand damage and ubiquitination. The analysis also shows Ct infection enhances host fatty acid beta oxidation, thereby inducing mROS, and the host responds to reduce ceramide production and glycolysis. The coinfection upregulates GC's own ion transporters and amino acid uptake, while it downregulates GC's restriction and modification systems. Meanwhile, GC has the nitrosative and oxidative stress response and also increases the ability for ferric uptake especially in the Ct+ group compared to Ct-uninfected group.
In conclusion, methods in bioinformatics were used here in analyzing the metabolism of Ct itself, and the responses of the host and GC respectively in a coinfection study with and without Ct. These methods provide metabolic and metatranscriptomic details to study Ct metabolism during infection and Ct associated coinfection in the human microbiota.
Immunologische Gedächtnisreaktionen sind die Grundlage um wiederkehrende Erreger schnell und effizient zu bekämpfen und um einen Impfschutz zu generieren. Das zellvermittelte Gedächtnis wird unter anderem durch CD8 Gedächtnis-T-Zellen aufgebaut, welche vor allem im Kontext von Immunreaktionen gegen intrazellulärer Erreger vonnöten sind, um bei Reinfektion mit den Erregerstämmen einen schnellen Schutz zu gewährleisten. Ein detailliertes Wissen über die Generierung, Kontrolle und Reaktivierung der Gedächtniszellen ist nützlich, um Gedächtnisreaktionen verstehen und lenken zu können. Durch die Entdeckung des TZR und CD28 wurden Meilensteine für das Verständnis der T-Zellaktivierung gelegt und die Grundlage geschaffen, CD8 Gedächtnisreaktionen zu verstehen. Auch wenn für primäre Immunreaktionen die „2-Signal-Theorie“ lange als erwiesen gilt, so blieb die Rolle der Kostimulation für Gedächtnisreaktionen lange umstritten. In dieser Arbeit wurden verschiedene methodische Herangehensweisen verwendet, mit denen durchgehend die Bedeutung von CD28 vermittelter Kostimulation für immunologische CD8 T-Zell-Gedächtnisreaktionen nachgewiesen wurde. CD28 blockierende Antikörper und CD28 induzierbar deletierbare Mauslinien wurden im Modellinfektionssystem mit Ovalbumin produzierenden Listeria monocytogenes zur Analyse der Primär- und Sekundärantworten verwendet. Mit diesen Methoden konnte eine Beeinträchtigung der Expansion von CD8 Gedächtniszellen in Abwesenheit von CD28 bewiesen werden. Weiterhin werden Effektorfunktionen wie Degranulation und Produktion von IFN-γ während der Sekundärinfektion in Abwesenheit von Kostimulation eingeschränkt. Mit Hilfe von Experimenten, bei denen CD28 suffizienten Mäusen eine geringe Anzahl an naiven, antigenspezifischen, CD28 deletierbaren CD8 T-Zellen transferiert wurden, wurde die Bedeutung der Kostimulation für die Expansion von Gedächtniszellen bestätigt, jedoch konnte überraschenderweise auch ein Anstieg der Effektorfunktionen in Abwesenheit von CD28 sowohl während der Primär- als auch der Sekundärantwort dokumentiert werden. Diese zur globalen Blockade bzw. Deletion widersprüchlichen Ergebnisse lassen eine Beteiligung anderer CD28 abhängiger Zelltypen an der Induktion der Effektorfunktionen der CD8 T-Zellen plausibel erscheinen, wie zum Beispiel Einflüsse von T-Helferzellen, welche die Effektorfunktionen positiv verstärken, solange sie selbst Kostimulationssignale empfangen können. Weiterhin konnte gezeigt werden, dass sich Gedächtniszellen an den CD28 defizienten Phänotyp – eine CD28 intakte immunologische Umgebung vorausgesetzt – adaptieren können, wenn ausreichend Zeit nach Deletion und vor Sekundärinfektion verstreichen konnte.
Immunotherapy with engineered T cells expressing a tumor-specific chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) is under intense preclinical and clinical investigation. This involves a rapidly increasing portfolio of novel target antigens and CAR designs that need to be tested in time- and work-intensive screening campaigns in primary T cells. Therefore, we anticipated that a standardized screening platform, similar as in pharmaceutical small molecule and antibody discovery, would facilitate the analysis of CARs by pre-selecting lead candidates from a large pool of constructs that differ in their extracellular and intracellular modules. Because CARs integrate structural elements of the T cell receptor (TCR) complex and engage TCR-associated signaling molecules upon stimulation, we reasoned that the transcription factors nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) and nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT) could serve as surrogate markers for primary T cell function. The nuclear translocation of both transcription factors in primary T cells, which we observed following CAR stimulation, supported our rationale to use NF-κB and NFAT as indicators of CAR-mediated activation in a screening platform.
To enable standardized and convenient analyses, we have established a CAR-screening platform based on the human T cell lymphoma line Jurkat that has been modified to provide rapid detection of NF-κB and NFAT activation. For this purpose, Jurkat cells contained NF-κB and NFAT-inducible reporter genes that generate a duplex output of cyan fluorescent protein (CFP) and green fluorescent protein (GFP), respectively. Upon stimulation of NF-κB/NFAT reporter cells, the expression of both fluorophores could be readily quantified in high-throughput screening campaigns by flow cytometry.
We modified the reporter cells with CD19-specific and ROR1-specific CARs, and we co-cultured them with antigen-positive stimulator cells to analyze NF-κB and NFAT activation. CAR-induced reporter signals could already be detected after 6 hours. The optimal readout window with high-level reporter activation was set to 24 hours, allowing the CAR-screening platform to deliver results in a rapid turnaround time. A reporter cell-screening campaign of a spacer library with CARs comprising a short, intermediate or long IgG4-Fc domain allowed distinguishing functional from non-functional constructs. Similarly, reporter cell-based analyses identified a ROR1-CAR with 4-1BB domain from a library with different intracellular signal modules due to its ability to confer high NF-κB activation, consistent with data from in vitro and in vivo studies with primary T cells. The results of both CAR screening campaigns were highly reproducible, and the time required for completing each testing campaign was substantially shorter with reporter cells (6 days) compared to primary T cells (21 days). We further challenged the reporter cells in a large-scale screening campaign with a ROR1 CAR library comprising mutations in the VH CDR3 sequence of the R11 scFv. This region is crucial for binding the R11 epitope of ROR1, and we anticipated that mutations here would cause a loss of specificity and affinity for most of the CAR variants. This provided the opportunity to determine whether the CAR screening platform was able to retrieve functional constructs from a large pool of CAR variants. Indeed, using a customized pre enrichment and screening strategy, the reporter cells identified a functional CAR variant that was present with a frequency of only 6 in 1.05x10^6.
As our CAR-screening platform enabled the analysis of activating signal modules, it encouraged us to also evaluate inhibitory signal modules that change the CAR mode of action. Such an inhibitory CAR (iCAR) can be used in logic gates with an activating CAR to interfere with T cell stimulation. By selecting appropriate target antigens for iCAR and CAR, this novel application aims to improve the selectivity towards tumor cells, and it could readily be studied using our screening platform. Accordingly, we tested CD19-specific iCARs with inhibitory PD-1 signal module for their suppressive effect on reporter gene activation. In logic gates with CAR or TCR stimulation, a decrease of NF-κB and NFAT signals was only observed when activating and inhibitory receptors were forced into spatial proximity. These results were further verified by experiments with primary T cells.
In conclusion, our reporter cell system is attractive as a platform technology because it is independent of testing in primary T cells, exportable between laboratories, and scalable to enable small- to large-scale screening campaigns of CAR libraries. The pre-selection of appropriate lead candidates with optimal extracellular and intracellular modules can reduce the number of CAR constructs to be investigated in further in vitro and in vivo studies with primary T cells. We are therefore confident that our CAR-screening platform based on NF-κB/NFAT reporter cells will be useful to accelerate translational research by facilitating the evaluation of CARs with novel design parameters.
Neisseria gonorrhoeae (GC) is a human specific pathogenic bacterium. Currently, N. gonorrhoeae developed resistance to virtually all the available antibiotics used for treatment. N. gonorrhoeae starts infection by colonizing the cell surface, followed by invasion of the host cell, intracellular persistence, transcytosis and exit into the subepithelial space. Subepithelial bacteria can reach the bloodstream and disseminate to other tissues causing systemic infections, which leads to serious conditions such as arthritis and pneumonia. A number of studies have well established the host-pathogen interactions during the initial adherence and invasion steps. However, the mechanism of intracellular survival and traversal is poorly understood so far. Hence, identification of novel bacterial virulence factors and host factors involved in the host-pathogen interaction is a crucial step in understanding disease development and uncovering novel therapeutic approaches. Besides, most of the previous studies about N. gonorrhoeae were performed in the conventional cell culture. Although they have provided insights into host-pathogen interactions, much information about the native infection microenvironment, such as cell polarization and barrier function, is still missing.
This work focused on determining the function of novel bacterial virulence factor NGFG_01605 and host factor (FLCN) in gonococcal infection. NGFG_01605 was identified by Tn5 transposon library screening. It is a putative U32 protease. Unlike other proteins in this family, it is not secreted and has no ex vivo protease activity. NGFG_01605 knockout decreases gonococcal survival in the epithelial cell. 3D models based on T84 cell was developed for the bacterial transmigration assay. NGFG_01605 knockout does not affect gonococcal transmigration.
The novel host factor FLCN was identified by shRNA library screening in search for factors that affected gonococcal adherence and/or internalization. We discovered that FLCN did not affect N. gonorrhoeae adherence and invasion but was essential for bacterial survival. Since programmed cell death is a host defence mechanism against intracellular pathogens, we further explored apoptosis and autophagy upon gonococcal infection and determined that FLCN did not affect apoptosis but inhibited autophagy. Moreover, we found that FLCN inhibited the expression of E-cadherin. Knockdown of E- cadherin decreased the autophagy flux and supported N. gonorrhoeae survival. Both non-polarized and polarized cells are present in the cervix, and additionally, E-cadherin represents different polarization properties on these different cells. Therefore, we established 3-D models to better understand the functions of FLCN. We discovered that FLCN was critical for N. gonorrhoeae survival in the 3-D environment as well, but not through inhibiting autophagy. Furthermore, FLCN inhibits the E-cadherin expression and disturbs its polarization in the 3-D models. Since N. gonorrhoeae can cross the epithelial cell barriers through both cell-cell junctions and transcellular migration, we further explored the roles FLCN and E-cadherin played in transmigration. FLCN delayed N. gonorrhoeae transmigration, whereas the knockdown of E-cadherin increased N. gonorrhoeae transmigration.
In summary, we revealed roles of the NGFG_01605 and FLCN-E-cadherin axis play in N. gonorrhoeae infection, particularly in relation to intracellular survival and transmigration. This is also the first study that connects FLCN and human-specific pathogen infection.
Neisseria gonorrhoeae, the causative agent of the sexually transmitted disease gonorrhea, has the potential to spread in the human host and cause a severe complication called disseminated gonococcal infection (DGI). The expression of the major outer membrane porin PorBIA is a characteristic of most gonococci associated with DGI. PorBIA binds to the scavenger receptor expressed on endothelial cells (SREC-I), which mediates the so-called low phosphate-dependent invasion (LPDI). This uptake mechanism enables N. gonorrhoeae to rapidly invade epithelial and endothelial cells in a phosphate-sensitive manner.
We recently demonstrated that the neutral sphingomyelinase, which catalyses the hydrolysis of sphingomyelin to ceramide and phosphorylcholine, is required for the LPDI of gonococci in non-phagocytic cells. Neutral sphingomyelinase 2 (NSM2) plays a key role in the early PorBIA signaling by recruiting the PI3 kinase to caveolin. The following activation of the PI3 kinase-dependent downstream signaling leads to the engulfment of the bacteria. As a part of this work, I could confirm the involvement of the NSM2. The role of the enzyme was further elucidated by the generation of antibodies directed against NSM2 and the construction of an epithelium-based NSM2 knockout cell line using CRISPR/Cas9. The knockout of the NSM2 strongly inhibits the LPDI. The invasion could be, however, restored by the complementation of the knockout using an NSM2-GFP construct. However, the results could not be reproduced.
In this work, I could show the involvement of further members of the sphingolipid pathway in the PorBIA-mediated invasion. Lipidome analysis revealed an increase of the bioactive molecules ceramide and sphingosine due to gonococcal infection. Both molecules do not only affect the host cell, but seem to influence the bacteria as well: while ceramide seems to be incorporated by the gonococci, sphingosine is toxic for the bacteria. Furthermore, the sphingosine kinase 2 (SPHK2) plays an important role in invasion, since the inhibition and knockdown of the enzyme revealed a negative effect on gonococcal invasion. To elucidate the role of the sphingosine kinases in invasion in more detail, an activity assay was established in this study. Additionally, the impact of the sphingosine-1-phosphate lyase (S1PL) on invasion was investigated. Inhibitor studies and infection experiments conducted with a CRISPR/Cas9 HeLa S1PL knockout cell line revealed a role of the enzyme not only in the PorBIA-mediated invasion, but also in the Opa50/HSPG-mediated gonococcal invasion. The signaling experiments allowed the categorization of the SPHK and S1PL activation in the context of infection. Like the NSM2, both enzymes play a role in the early PorBIA signaling events leading to the uptake of the bacteria. All those findings indicate an important role of sphingolipids in the invasion and survival of N. gonorrhoeae.
In the last part of this work, the role of the NSM2 in the inhibition of apoptosis in neutrophils due to gonococcal infection was investigated. It could be demonstrated that the delayed onset of apoptosis is independent of neisserial porin and Opa proteins. Furthermore, the influence of neisserial peptidoglycan on PMN apoptosis was analysed using mutant strains, but no connection could be determined. Since the NSM2 is the most prominent sphingomyelinase in PMNs, fulfils manifold cell physiological functions and has already been connected to apoptosis, the impact of the enzyme on apoptosis inhibition due to gonococcal infection was investigated using inhibitors, with no positive results.
Staphylococcus aureus asymptomatically colonises one third of the healthy human population, finding its niche in the nose and on skin. Apart from being a commensal, it is also an important opportunistic human pathogen capable of destructing tissue, invading host cells and killing them from within. This eventually contributes to severe hospital- and community-acquired infections. Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), resistant to commonly used antibiotics are protected when residing within the host cell.
This doctoral thesis is focused on the investigation of staphylococcal factors governing intracellular virulence and subsequent host cell death. To initiate an unbiased approach to conduct this study, complex S. aureus mutant pools were generated using transposon insertional mutagenesis. Genome-wide infection screens were performed using these S. aureus transposon mutant pools in vitro and in vivo, followed by analysis using Transposon insertion site deep sequencing (Tn-seq) technology.
Amongst several other factors, this study identified a novel regulatory system in S. aureus that controls pathogen-induced host cytotoxicity and intra-host survival. The primary components of this system are an AraC-family transcription regulator called Repressor of surface proteins (Rsp) and a virulence associated non-coding RNA, SSR42. Mutants within rsp exhibit enhanced intra-host survival in human epithelial cells and delayed host cytotoxicity. Global gene-expression profiling by RNA-seq demonstrated that Rsp controls the expression of SSR42, several cytotoxins and other bacterial factors directed against the host immune system. Rsp enhances S. aureus toxin response when triggered by hydrogen peroxide, an antimicrobial substance employed by neutrophils to destroy pathogens. Absence of rsp reduces S. aureus-induced neutrophil damage and early lethality during mouse pneumonia, but still permits blood stream infection. Intriguingly, S. aureus lacking rsp exhibited enhanced survival in human macrophages, which hints towards a Trojan horse-like phenomenon and could facilitate dissemination within the host.
Hence, Rsp emerged as a global regulator of bacterial virulence, which has an impact on disease progression with prolonged intra-cellular survival, delayed-lethality but allows disseminated manifestation of disease. Moreover, this study exemplifies the use of genome-wide approaches as useful resources for identifying bacterial factors and deduction of its pathogenesis.
Staphylococcus aureus is a prevalent commensal bacterium which represents one of the leading causes in health care-associated bacterial infections worldwide and can cause a variety of different diseases ranging from simple abscesses to severe and life threatening infections including pneumonia, osteomyelitis and sepsis.
In recent times multi-resistant strains have emerged, causing severe problems in nosocomial as well as community-acquired (CA) infection settings, especially in the United States (USA). Therefore S. aureus has been termed as a superbug by the WHO, underlining the severe health risk originating from it. Today, infections in the USA are dominated by S. aureus genotypes which are classified as USA300 and USA400, respectively. Strains of genotype USA300 are responsible for about 70% of the CA infections.
The molecular mechanisms which render S. aureus such an effective pathogen are still not understood in its entirety. For decades S. aureus was thought to be a strictly extracellular pathogen relying on pore-forming toxins like α-hemolysin to damage human cells and tissue. Only recently it has been shown that S. aureus can enter non-professional phagocytes, using adhesins like the fibronectin-binding proteins which mediate an endocytotic uptake into the host cells. The bacteria are consequently localized to endosomes, where the degradation of enclosed bacterial cells through phagosome maturation would eventually occur.
S. aureus can avoid degradation, and translocate to the cellular cytoplasm, where it can replicate. The ability to cause this so-called phagosomal escape has mainly been attributed to a family of amphiphilic peptides called phenol soluble modulins (PSMs), but as studies have shown, they are not sufficient.
In this work I used a transposon mutant library in combination with automated fluorescence microscopy to screen for genes involved in the phagosomal escape process and intracellular survival of S. aureus. I thereby identified a number of genes, including a non-ribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS). The NRPS, encoded by the genes ausA and ausB, produces two types of small peptides, phevalin and tyrvalin. Mutations in the ausAB genes lead to a drastic decrease in phagosomal escape rates in epithelial cells, which were readily restored by genetic complementation in trans as well as by supplementation of synthetic phevalin. In leukocytes, phevalin interferes with calcium fluxes and activation of neutrophils and promotes cytotoxicity of intracellular bacteria in both, macrophages and neutrophils. Further ausAB is involved in survival and virulence of the bacterium during mouse lung pneumoniae.
The here presented data demonstrates the contribution of the bacterial cyclic dipeptide phevalin to S. aureus virulence and suggests, that phevalin directly acts on a host cell target to promote cytotoxicity of intracellular bacteria.
Bacterial functional membrane microdomains (FMMs) are membrane platforms that resemble lipid rafts of eukaryotic cells in certain functional and structural aspects. Lipid rafts are nanometer-sized, dynamic clusters of proteins and lipids in eukaryotic cell membranes that serve as signaling hubs and assembling platforms. Yet, studying these structures can often be hampered by the complexity of a eukaryotic cell. Thus, the analogous structures of prokaryotes are an attractive model to study molecular traits of this type of membrane organization.
Similar to eukaryotic lipid rafts, the bacterial FMMs are comprised of polyisoprenoid lipids, scaffold proteins and a distinct set of membrane proteins, involved in signaling or secretion. Investigating bacterial FMMs not only contributes to the understanding of the physiological importance of FMMs in bacteria, but also helps to elucidate general principles of rafts beyond prokaryotes.
In this work, a bacterial model organism was used to investigate effects of synthetic overproduction of the raft scaffolding proteins on bacterial physiology. This overexpression causes an unusual stabilization of the FMM-harbored protease FtsH and therefore the proteolytic targets of FtsH are not correctly regulated. Developmental defects and aberrances in shape are the consequence, which in turn negatively affects cell physiology. These findings may be adapted to better understand lipid raft processes in humans, where flotillin upregulation is detected along with development of neurological diseases.
Moreover, it was aimed at understanding the FMM-proteome of the human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus. An in-depth quantitative mass-spectrometry analysis reveals adaption of the protein cargo during different conditions, while maintaining a distinct set of core FMM proteins. As a case study, the assembly of the type VII secretion system was shown to be dependent on FMM integrity and more specifically on the activity of the FMM-scaffold flotillin. This secretion system is important for the virulence of this pathogen and its secretion efficiency can be targeted by small molecules that inhibit flotillin activity. This opens new venues for non-conventional antimicrobial compounds to treat staphylococcal infections.