Heme utilization by nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae is essential and dependent on Sap transporter function.
Mason. Kevin M KM; Raffel. Forrest K FK; Ray. William C WC; Bakaletz. Lauren O LO
Key Findings
- SapA, part of the Sap transporter in nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae, directly binds heme and is essential for heme use.
- Human antimicrobial peptides (β‑defensins 2/3, LL‑37, neutrophil protein 1, melittin) can displace heme from SapA.
- The Sap transporter thus has dual roles: helping the bacteria acquire iron and evading host antimicrobial peptides.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this research does not provide a new protocol or dosage for LL‑37 use. It mainly offers basic insight into how bacteria interact with our innate immune peptides, which may be interesting for understanding infection mechanisms but has limited direct application to longevity or performance optimization.
Summary
The study shows that a bacterial protein called SapA can bind both heme (an iron source) and several human antimicrobial peptides, including LL-37. When these peptides bind SapA, they can block heme uptake, suggesting the bacteria prioritize defending against the immune system over getting iron. This reveals a new way the bacteria hide from our immune defenses.
Abstract
Bacterial strategies of innate immune evasion and essential metabolic functions are critical for commensal-host homeostasis. Previously, we showed that Sap translocator function is necessary for nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHI) behaviors that mediate diseases of the human airway. Antimicrobial peptide (AP) lethality is limited by binding mediated by the Sap complex. SapA shares homology with the dipeptide-binding protein (DppA) and the heme-binding lipoprotein (HbpA), both of which have previously been shown to bind the iron-containing compound heme, whose acquisition is essential for Haemophilus survival. Computational modeling revealed conserved SapA residues, similarly modeled to mediate heme binding in HbpA. Here, we directly demonstrate that SapA bound heme and was essential for heme utilization by iron-starved NTHI. Further, the Sap translocator permease mediated heme transport into the bacterial cytoplasm, thus defining a heretofore unknown mechanism of intracytoplasmic membrane heme transport in Haemophilus. Since we demonstrate multiple ligand specificity for the SapA-binding protein, we tested whether APs would compete with heme for SapA binding. We showed that human β-defensins 2 and 3, human cathelicidin LL-37, human neutrophil protein 1, and melittin displaced heme bound to SapA, thus supporting a hierarchy wherein immune evasion supercedes even the needed iron acquisition functions of the Sap system.
Study Information
pubmed
2011
2011-03-25T00:00:00.000Z
10.1128/jb.01313-10