PepO, a CovRS-controlled endopeptidase, disrupts Streptococcus pyogenes quorum sensing.
Wilkening. Reid V RV; Chang. Jennifer C JC; Federle. Michael J MJ
Key Findings
- LL‑37 fragment activates the CovRS system in GAS
- Activated CovRS leads to PepO enzyme degrading SHP pheromone signals
- PepO is the first known enzyme that silences an RRNPP‑type quorum‑sensing pathway
Practical Outcomes
- For the biohacker community, there are no direct actions to take; the findings are about bacterial communication and virulence, not about human supplementation or protocols. It may be of interest for future antibiotic research, but it does not provide usable guidance for longevity or performance optimization today.
Summary
The study shows that a piece of the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 can trigger a bacterial sensor system (CovRS) in Streptococcus pyogenes, causing the enzyme PepO to break down signaling molecules the bacteria use to coordinate group behavior. This shuts down a quorum‑sensing pathway (Rgg2/3) that is active when the bacteria are not causing disease, helping the bacteria switch to a more aggressive state. The work is mainly about how the bacteria control their own virulence, not about human health benefits.
Abstract
Group A Streptococcus (GAS, Streptococcus pyogenes) is a human-restricted pathogen with a capacity to both colonize asymptomatically and cause illnesses ranging from pharyngitis to necrotizing fasciitis. An understanding of how and when GAS switches between genetic programs governing these different lifestyles has remained an enduring mystery and likely requires carefully tuned environmental sensors to activate and silence genetic schemes when appropriate. Herein, we describe the relationship between the Control of Virulence (CovRS, CsrRS) two-component system and the Rgg2/3 quorum-sensing pathway. We demonstrate that responses of CovRS to the stress signals Mg(2+) and a fragment of the antimicrobial peptide LL-37 result in modulated activity of pheromone signaling of the Rgg2/3 pathway through a means of proteolysis of SHP peptide pheromones. This degradation is mediated by the cytoplasmic endopeptidase PepO, which is the first identified enzymatic silencer of an RRNPP-type quorum-sensing pathway. These results suggest that under conditions in which the virulence potential of GAS is elevated (i.e. enhanced virulence gene expression), cellular responses mediated by the Rgg2/3 pathway are abrogated and allow individuals to escape from group behavior. These results also indicate that Rgg2/3 signaling is instead functional during non-virulent GAS lifestyles.
Study Information
pubmed
2015
2015-10-14T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/mmi.13216
40
63