The Bacillus anthracis protein MprF is required for synthesis of lysylphosphatidylglycerols and for resistance to cationic antimicrobial peptides.
Samant. Shalaka S; Hsu. Fong-Fu FF; Neyfakh. Alexander A AA; Lee. Hyunwoo H
Key Findings
- MprF is required for synthesis of lysyl‑phosphatidylglycerols in B. anthracis
- Deleting the MprF gene makes the bacteria highly sensitive to LL‑37 and other cationic antimicrobial peptides
- Genetic complementation restores lipid production and resistance, confirming MprF’s role
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the work highlights that some bacteria can evade LL‑37 by altering their membrane lipids, so simply boosting LL‑37 levels may not overcome such defenses. It doesn’t provide new dosing or usage guidance for LL‑37 in humans, but underscores the importance of understanding bacterial resistance mechanisms.
Summary
The study shows that a protein called MprF in anthrax bacteria helps them make special lipids that protect them from the body’s natural antimicrobial peptide LL‑37. When the MprF gene is removed, the bacteria become much more vulnerable to LL‑37 and similar peptides. This is mainly a bacterial defense mechanism, not a new way to use LL‑37 for human health.
Abstract
During inhalational anthrax, Bacillus anthracis survives and replicates in alveolar macrophages, followed by rapid invasion into the host's bloodstream, where it multiplies to cause heavy bacteremia. B. anthracis must therefore defend itself from host immune functions encountered during both the intracellular and the extracellular stages of anthrax infection. In both of these niches, cationic antimicrobial peptides are an essential component of the host's innate immune response that targets B. anthracis. However, the genetic determinants of B. anthracis contributing to resistance to these peptides are largely unknown. Here we generated Tn917 transposon mutants in the DeltaANR strain (pXO1- pXO2-) of B. anthracis and screened them for altered protamine susceptibility. A protamine-sensitive mutant identified carried the transposon inserted in the BA1486 gene encoding a putative membrane protein homologous to MprF known in several gram-positive pathogens. A mutant strain with the BAS1375 gene (the orthologue of BA1486) deleted in the Sterne 34F2 strain (pXO1+ pXO2-) of B. anthracis exhibited hypersusceptibility not only to protamine but also to alpha-helical cathelicidin LL-37 and beta-sheet defensin human neutrophil peptide 1 compared to the wild-type Sterne strain. Analysis of membrane lipids using isotopic labeling demonstrated that the BAS1375 deletion mutant is unable to synthesize lysinylated phosphatidylglycerols, and this defect is rescued by genetic complementation. Further, we determined the structures of these lysylphosphatidylglycerols by using various mass spectrometric analyses. These results demonstrate that in B. anthracis a functional MprF is required for the biosynthesis of lysylphosphatidylglycerols, which is critical for resistance to cationic antimicrobial peptides.
Study Information
pubmed
2008
2008-12-12T00:00:00.000Z
10.1128/jb.01345-08