The extracellular loop of the membrane permease VraG interacts with GraS to sense cationic antimicrobial peptides in Staphylococcus aureus.
Cho. Junho J; Costa. Stephen K SK; Wierzbicki. Rachel M RM; Rigby. William F C WFC; Cheung. Ambrose L AL
Key Findings
- S. aureus uses the GraRS two‑component system together with the VraG permease to detect LL‑37.
- The extracellular loop of VraG, rich in positive charges, interacts with GraS and dampens the killing signal.
- Deleting the VraG loop or mutating a key lysine (K380) increases LL‑37 killing of the bacteria.
Practical Outcomes
- For DIY health enthusiasts, the research mainly highlights a bacterial resistance trick rather than offering a new way to use LL‑37. It suggests that LL‑37 alone may be less effective against certain resistant strains, and any protocol would need to consider ways to bypass or inhibit this bacterial sensing system, which currently isn’t available for personal use.
Summary
The study shows that Staphylococcus aureus has a built‑in system (GraRS‑VraG) that can sense and defend against the human antimicrobial peptide LL‑37, and that a specific part of the VraG protein blocks the bacteria’s alarm system, making the bacteria harder to kill. Removing that part makes the bacteria more vulnerable to LL‑37.
Abstract
Host defense proteins (HDPs), aka defensins, are a key part of the innate immune system that functions by inserting into the bacterial membranes to form pores to kill invading and colonizing microorganisms. To ensure survival, microorganism such as S. aureus has developed survival strategies to sense and respond to HDPs. One key strategy in S. aureus is a two-component system (TCS) called GraRS coupled to an efflux pump that consists of a membrane permease VraG and an ATPase VraF, analogous to the BceRS-BceAB system of Bacillus subtilis but with distinct differences. While the 9 negatively charged amino acid extracellular loop of the membrane sensor GraS has been shown to be involved in sensing, the major question is how such a small loop can sense diverse HDPs. Mutation analysis in this study divulged that the vraG mutant phenocopied the graS mutant with respect to reduced activation of downstream effector mprF, reduction in surface positive charge and enhanced 2 hr. killing with LL-37 as compared with the parental MRSA strain JE2. In silico analysis revealed VraG contains a single 200-residue extracellular loop (EL) situated between the 7th and 8th transmembrane segments (out of 10). Remarkably, deletion of EL in VraG enhanced mprF expression, augmented surface positive charge and improved survival in LL-37 vs. parent JE2. As the EL of VraG is rich in lysine residues (16%), in contrast to a preponderance of negatively charged aspartic acid residues (3 out of 9) in the EL of GraS, we divulged the role of charge interaction by showing that K380 in the EL of VraG is an important residue that likely interacts with GraS to interfere with GraS-mediated signaling. Bacterial two-hybrid analysis also supported the interaction of EL of VraG with the EL of GraS. Collectively, we demonstrated an interesting facet of efflux pumps whereby the membrane permease disrupts HDP signaling by inhibiting GraS sensing that involves charged residues in the EL of VraG.
Study Information
pubmed
2021
2021-03-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1371/journal.ppat.1009338
22
47