Functional characterization of the gonococcal polyphosphate pseudo-capsule.
Manca. Benedetta B; Buffi. Giada G; Magri. Greta G; Del Vecchio. Mariangela M; Taddei. Anna Rita AR; Pezzicoli. Alfredo A; Giuliani. Maria M
Key Findings
- Polyphosphate forms a pseudo‑capsule on some gonorrhea strains
- The pseudo‑capsule blocks complement‑mediated killing, LL‑37 antimicrobial activity, and neutrophil killing
- Adding external polyphosphate can rescue vulnerable strains
- Strains lacking the capsule are more easily killed
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the study shows that polyphosphate can protect bacteria from the body’s natural defenses, suggesting that targeting polyphosphate might be a future strategy to combat infections. However, it does not provide direct protocols or dosage guidance for personal health.
Summary
Neisseria gonorrhoeae can coat itself with a sticky molecule called polyphosphate that acts like a shield, helping it survive the body’s defenses including the natural antibiotic peptide LL‑37. Removing this coating makes the bacteria vulnerable, while adding extra polyphosphate protects them.
Abstract
Neisseria gonorrhoeae is an exclusively human pathogen able to evade the host immune system through multiple mechanisms. Gonococci accumulate a large portion of phosphate moieties as polyphosphate (polyP) on the exterior of the cell. Although its polyanionic nature has suggested that it may form a protective shield on the cell surface, its role remains controversial. Taking advantage of a recombinant His-tagged polyP-binding protein, the presence of a polyP pseudo-capsule in gonococcus was demonstrated. Interestingly, the polyP pseudo-capsule was found to be present in specific strains only. To investigate its putative role in host immune evasion mechanisms, such as resistance to serum bactericidal activity, antimicrobial peptides and phagocytosis, the enzymes involved in polyP metabolism were genetically deleted, generating mutants with altered polyP external content. The mutants with lower polyP content on their surface compared to the wild-type strains, became sensitive to complement-mediated killing in presence of normal human serum. Conversely, naturally serum sensitive strains that did not display a significant polyP pseudo-capsule became resistant to complement in the presence of exogenous polyP. The presence of polyP pseudo-capsule was also critical in the protection from antibacterial activity of cationic antimicrobial peptide, such as cathelicidin LL-37. Results showed that the minimum bactericidal concentration was lower in strains lacking polyP than in those harboring the pseudo-capsule. Data referring to phagocytic killing resistance, assessed by using neutrophil-like cells, showed a significant decrease in viability of mutants lacking polyP on their cell surface in comparison to the wild-type strain. The addition of exogenous polyP overturned the killing phenotype of sensitive strains suggesting that gonococcus could exploit environmental polyP to survive to complement-mediated, cathelicidin and intracellular killing. Taken together, data presented here indicate an essential role of the polyP pseudo-capsule in the gonococcal pathogenesis, opening new perspective on gonococcal biology and more effective treatments.
Study Information
pubmed
2023
2023-05-22T00:00:00.000Z
10.1371/journal.ppat.1011400
3
62