A point mutation in AgrC determines cytotoxic or colonizing properties associated with phenotypic variants of ST22 MRSA strains.
Mairpady Shambat. Srikanth S; Siemens. Nikolai N; Monk. Ian R IR; Mohan. Disha B DB; Mukundan. Santhosh S; Krishnan. Karthickeyan Chella KC; Prabhakara. Sushma S; Snäll. Johanna J; Kearns. Angela A; Vandenesch. Francois F; Svensson. Mattias M; Kotb. Malak M; Gopal. Balasubramanian B; Arakere. Gayathri G; Norrby-Teglund. Anna A
Key Findings
- Y223C mutation in AgrC creates a colonizing, less toxic MRSA phenotype with up‑regulated surface proteins
- Colonizing strains are less susceptible to the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 and induce autophagy
- Cytotoxic strains with Y223 cause inflammasome activation and severe skin pathology
Practical Outcomes
- For self‑directed health enthusiasts, the study offers no actionable changes to personal protocols. It simply shows that LL‑37’s effectiveness against MRSA varies with bacterial genetics, so using LL‑37 as a supplement or treatment isn’t a reliable strategy for infection control.
Summary
A single amino‑acid change in a bacterial sensor protein (AgrC) decides whether a MRSA strain is highly damaging or just lives on the skin. The cysteine version makes the bacteria less harmful, more resistant to the natural antimicrobial peptide LL‑37, and triggers cell cleanup, while the tyrosine version causes strong inflammation and severe skin damage.
Abstract
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is a major cause of skin and soft tissue infections. One of the highly successful and rapidly disseminating clones is MRSA ST22 commonly associated with skin tropism. Here we show that a naturally occurring single amino acid substitution (tyrosine to cysteine) at position 223 of AgrC determines starkly different ST22 S. aureus virulence phenotypes, e.g. cytotoxic or colonizing, as evident in both in vitro and in vivo skin infections. Y223C amino acid substitution destabilizes AgrC-AgrA interaction leading to a colonizing phenotype characterized by upregulation of bacterial surface proteins. The colonizing phenotype strains cause less severe skin tissue damage, show decreased susceptibility towards the antimicrobial LL-37 and induce autophagy. In contrast, cytotoxic strains with tyrosine at position 223 of AgrC cause infections characterized by inflammasome activation and severe skin tissue pathology. Taken together, the study demonstrates how a single amino acid substitution in the histidine kinase receptor AgrC of ST22 strains determines virulence properties and infection outcome.
Study Information
pubmed
2016
2016-08-11T00:00:00.000Z
10.1038/srep31360
31
60