Induction of group A Streptococcus virulence by a human antimicrobial peptide.
Gryllos. Ioannis I; Tran-Winkler. Hien J HJ; Cheng. Ming-Fang MF; Chung. Hachung H; Bolcome. Robert R; Lu. Wuyuan W; Lehrer. Robert I RI; Wessels. Michael R MR
Key Findings
- Sub‑inhibitory LL‑37 boosts expression of the GAS capsule synthesis genes (hasABC).
- The boost is controlled by the CsrRS two‑component system and can be blocked by extra magnesium.
- LL‑37‑treated GAS shows higher resistance to killing by human white blood cells.
Practical Outcomes
- If you’re considering ways to raise LL‑37 levels for health benefits, be aware it might unintentionally help certain bacteria like strep become more virulent. This suggests caution with any LL‑37‑enhancing supplements or therapies, especially during an infection.
Summary
The study found that low, non‑killing amounts of the human immune peptide LL‑37 actually tell the strep bacteria to become more dangerous by making them produce more protective capsule and other harmful proteins, which helps them avoid being killed by immune cells.
Abstract
Group A streptococci (Streptococcus pyogenes or GAS) freshly isolated from individuals with streptococcal sore throat or invasive ("flesh-eating") infection often grow as mucoid colonies on primary culture but lose this colony appearance after laboratory passage. The mucoid phenotype is due to abundant production of the hyaluronic acid capsular polysaccharide, a key virulence determinant associated with severe GAS infections. These observations suggest that signal(s) from the human host trigger increased production of capsule and perhaps other virulence factors during infection. Here we show that subinhibitory concentrations of the human antimicrobial cathelicidin peptide LL-37 stimulate expression of the GAS capsule synthesis operon (hasABC). Up-regulation is mediated by the CsrRS 2-component regulatory system: it requires a functional CsrS sensor protein and can be antagonized by increased extracellular Mg(2+), the other identified environmental signal for CsrS. Up-regulation was also evident for other CsrRS-regulated virulence genes, including the IL-8 protease PrtS/ScpC and the integrin-like/IgG protease Mac/IdeS, findings that suggest a coordinated GAS virulence response elicited by this antimicrobial immune effector peptide. LL-37 signaling through CsrRS led to a marked increase in GAS resistance to opsonophagocytic killing by human leukocytes, an in vitro measure of enhanced GAS virulence, consistent with increased expression of the antiphagocytic capsular polysaccharide and Mac/IdeS. We propose that the human cathelicidin LL-37 has the paradoxical effect of stimulating CsrRS-regulated virulence gene expression, thereby enhancing GAS pathogenicity during infection. The ability of GAS to sense and respond to LL-37 may explain, at least in part, the unique susceptibility of the human species to streptococcal infection.
Study Information
pubmed
2008
2008-10-20T00:00:00.000Z
10.1073/pnas.0803815105
143
55