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Infection and Immunity, July 2000, p. 3990-3997, Vol. 68, No. 7
0019-9567/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Inhibitory and Bactericidal Effects of Hydrogen Peroxide
Production by Streptococcus pneumoniae on Other
Inhabitants of the Upper Respiratory Tract
Christopher D.
Pericone,1
Karin
Overweg,2
Peter W. M.
Hermans,2 and
Jeffrey
N.
Weiser1,*
Departments of Pediatrics and Microbiology,
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania 19104,1 and Department of
Pediatrics, Sophia Children's Hospital, Erasmus University, 3015 GD Rotterdam, The Netherlands2
Received 28 January 2000/Returned for modification 7 March
2000/Accepted 12 April 2000
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ABSTRACT |
An inverse correlation between colonization of the human
nasopharynx by Streptococcus pneumoniae and
Haemophilus influenzae, both common upper respiratory
pathogens, has been reported. Studies were undertaken to determine if
either of these organisms produces substances which inhibit growth of
the other. Culture supernatants from S. pneumoniae
inhibited growth of H. influenzae, whereas culture
supernatants from H. influenzae had no effect on the
growth of S. pneumoniae. Moreover, coculture of S. pneumoniae and H. influenzae led to a rapid decrease
in viable counts of H. influenzae. The addition of purified
catalase prevented killing of H. influenzae in coculture
experiments, suggesting that hydrogen peroxide may be responsible for
this bactericidal activity. H. influenzae was killed by
concentrations of hydrogen peroxide similar to that produced by
S. pneumoniae. Hydrogen peroxide is produced by
the pneumococcus through the action of pyruvate oxidase (SpxB)
under conditions of aerobic growth. Both an spxB mutant and
a naturally occurring variant of S. pneumoniae, which is downregulated in SpxB expression, were
unable to kill H. influenzae. A catalase-reversible inhibitory effect of S. pneumoniae on the growth of the
respiratory tract pathogens Moraxella catarrhalis and
Neisseria meningitidis was also observed. Elevated hydrogen
peroxide production, therefore, may be a means by which S. pneumoniae is able to inhibit a variety of competing organisms in
the aerobic environment of the upper respiratory tract.
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INTRODUCTION |
Bacterial pathogens are generally
studied individually, although in their natural environment they often
coexist or compete with multiple other microbial species. The focus of
this report is bacterial pathogens that commonly colonize and infect
the respiratory tract of humans. The results of clinical studies that
surveyed the etiologic agents in cases of otitis media in children and chronic bronchitis in adults showed that Streptococcus
pneumoniae and Haemophilus influenzae are the most
prevalent bacterial pathogens (14, 23). The frequency with
which these two species are isolated from the same specimen, however,
is significantly less than would be predicted based on their relative
prevalence (25, 30). This suggests that there may be
inhibitory effects of one species on the other in vivo. This would not
be an unexpected finding considering our current understanding of the
pathogenesis of colonization and infection by these species. For
instance, since both S. pneumoniae and H. influenzae express cell surface phosphorylcholine, which mediates
adherence to the receptor for platelet-activating factor, there may be
competition for the same host cell receptor (12, 35, 46). In
addition, phosphorylcholine is immunogenic, and antibody generated
against phosphorylcholine from one species may promote clearance of a
heterologous species bearing the same epitope (9, 31, 45).
However, the presence of phosphorylcholine is required for viability in
the case of the pneumococcus, while H. influenzae is able to
switch off expression of this antigen (44, 51). Another
example is the neuraminidase secreted by the pneumococcus, which has
the potential to remove sialic acid residues from bacterial competitors
known to express this as a cell surface structure (6, 10).
The lipopolysaccharide of the respiratory tract pathogen,
Neisseria meningitidis, and at least some strains of
H. influenzae are sialylated and, in the case of the former,
this modification acts to increase resistance to clearance mediated by
complement (17, 21, 28, 29).
In order to begin to examine the interactions of the coinhabitants of
the heavily colonized mucosal surface of the human upper respiratory
tract, we tested the effect of coculture in vitro on growth and
viability. These studies revealed that the pneumococcus produces
an inhibitory substance that was shown to be hydrogen peroxide.
This suggests that the production of H2O2 by
S. pneumoniae, previously shown to be cytotoxic for cultured
alveolar epithelial cells, may also be an effective mechanism for
limiting or eliminating competitive flora, including common pathogens
such as H. influenzae and N. meningitidis, which
share the same microenvironment (15). These species,
furthermore, are sensitive to levels of peroxide generated by the
pneumococcus despite their production of catalase, an enzyme that acts
to eliminate hydrogen peroxide (7, 8, 37).
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Bacterial strains, media, and chemicals.
Strains used in
this study are described in Table 1. All
strains were cultured in brain heart infusion broth (BHI) with or without 1.5% agar (Difco Laboratories, Detroit, Mich.). H. influenzae was grown in BHI medium supplemented with hemin and
L-histidine (dissolved in 1% triethanolamine, each at a
final concentration of 2.5 µg/ml) (sBHI) plus NAD (2.0 µg/ml)
(Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, Mo.). All organisms were grown at
37°C with aeration except streptococci, which were grown without
shaking. Plates containing streptococci and neisseriae were incubated
in the presence of supplemental carbon dioxide using candle extinction
jars. Pneumococci were plated on BHI containing 200 U of bovine liver
catalase per ml (Worthington Biochemical, Freehold, N.J.).
Supernatant inhibition assays.
Cultures of S. pneumoniae P394 were grown in liquid BHI medium at 37°C under
atmospheric conditions. After reaching mid-log phase (optical density
at 620 nm [OD620] = 0.3 to 0.4), the cultures were
harvested and spun at 10,000 × g for 2 min, and the
supernatant was filtered through 0.2-µm (pore-size) filters. The
target organism was grown in liquid BHI or sBHI medium to mid-log phase
(OD620 = 0.3 to 0.4) and then diluted 10-fold in
phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). Bacterial lawns were obtained by
spreading 50 µl of diluted culture on BHI or sBHI agar with or
without 200 U of catalase per ml. Then, 10-µl aliquots of supernatant
were spotted onto these plates and allowed to dry prior to incubation
at 37°C for 16 h. In some experiments, aliquots of supernatant
were treated with proteinase K (final concentration, 50 µg/ml; Sigma)
at 37°C for 1 h or heated to 65°C for 20 min prior to adding
them to plates containing target organisms.
Coculture experiments.
Bacteria were grown in BHI medium at
37°C until mid-log phase (OD620 = 0.3 to 0.4),
centrifuged for 2 min at 10,000 × g and 4°C, washed
in ice-cold Hanks balanced saline solution (HBSS; Gibco BRL,
Gaithersburg, Md.), and then resuspended in BHI at the original culture
volume. Equal volumes of S. pneumoniae and the target strain
were then mixed and incubated at 37°C in 96-well polystyrene
microtiter plates (Dynex Technologies, Inc., Chantilly, Va.). As a
negative control, each strain was mixed with an equal amount of BHI
alone. Where indicated, individual wells were supplemented with
catalase (final concentration, 1,000 U/ml). Serial dilutions were then
prepared in HBSS, and an aliquot was plated on BHI agar plates
containing catalase (final concentration, 200 U/ml) for viable counts.
Dilutions of mixed cultures were spread on BHI plates supplemented with
2.0% Fildes enrichment (Difco) and grown under atmospheric conditions
which selectively inhibited the growth of S. pneumoniae
and allowed enumeration of the target species. Removal of the Fildes
enrichment, which provides a source of hemin and NAD, provided
selective conditions preventing the growth of H. influenzae.
Hydrogen peroxide sensitivity assays.
Bacteria were grown in
BHI medium at 37°C until mid-log phase (OD620 = 0.3 to 0.4), centrifuged for 2 min at 10,000 × g and 4°C, washed in ice-cold HBSS, and resuspended in fresh BHI medium. Resuspended bacteria were added to microtiter plate wells in duplicate containing twofold dilutions of H2O2 (Sigma) in
BHI medium and incubated at 37°C for 30 min. Aliquots from each well
were applied to BHI agar plates containing 200 U of catalase per ml for
viable counts. The concentration of H2O2
required to cause a 99.9% decrease in the number of colonies compared
to the negative control without peroxide was recorded as the minimum
bactericidal concentration (MBC). For MIC determination, 50-fold
dilutions of stationary-phase cultures in BHI containing twofold
dilutions of H2O2 were incubated at 37°C
overnight. The minimum concentration necessary to prevent turbid growth
was considered the MIC.
Hydrogen peroxide production assays.
Hydrogen peroxide
production was measured in an assay developed by Pick and Keisari and
modified by Duane and coworkers (15, 36). Bacteria were
grown in BHI medium at 37°C until mid-log phase
(OD620 = 0.3 to 0.4), centrifuged for 2 min at
10,000 × g and 4°C, washed in ice-cold HBSS, and
resuspended in BHI medium to twice the original culture volume. Wells
for negative controls contained 1,000 U of catalase per ml. After
1 h of incubation under atmospheric conditions at 37°C, the
cultures were harvested, spun at 10,000 × g for 2 min,
and filtered through a 0.2-µm (pore-size) membrane. Immediately prior
to the assay, phenol red and horseradish peroxidase were added to
peroxide assay buffer (5.0 mM K2HPO4, 1.0 mM
KH2PO4, 140 mM NaCl, 0.5 mM glucose; pH 7.4) at
final concentrations of 0.46 mM and 0.046 U/ml, respectively. Aliquots
of filtered supernatant were added to the assay mixture at a ratio of 1 to 4 and incubated for 30 min at 37°C in duplicate. After the
reactions were stopped by the addition of NaOH (final concentration,
0.004 N) the absorbance was recorded at a wavelength of 610 nm.
Concentrations were calculated in comparison to a standard curve with
known amounts of H2O2 added to control
supernatant from wells containing catalase which had been heated to
100°C for 20 min to eliminate catalase activity.
Two-dimensional protein gel electrophoresis.
Two-dimensional
protein gel electrophoresis followed by staining, computerized
comparison, and mass spectrometric analysis of the proteins, was done
as described elsewhere (K. Overweg, C. D. Pericone, L. G. C. Verhouf, J. N. Weiser, H. D. Meiring, A. D. P. J. M. De Jong, R. De Groot, and P. W. M. Hermans, submitted for publication).
Western transfer and immunoblotting.
P878 containing an
in-frame fusion of TnphoA to the gene for pyruvate oxidase
(spxB) was grown on tryptic soy agar plates containing
catalase (200 U/ml) (38). Bacteria were grown for 16 h
at 37°C under atmospheric conditions (20% O2, 0.03%
CO2), in a candle extinction jar (17% O2, 3%
CO2), or in the GasPak anaerobic system (<0.01%
O2, 10% CO2) (Becton Dickinson, Cockeysville, Md.). Cells were harvested from plates, adjusted to equal density based
on absorbance at 620 nm, washed in cold PBS, and treated at 100°C for
5 min in gel loading buffer (50 mM Tris-Cl, pH 6.8; 100 mM
-mercaptoethanol; 10% glycerol; 2% sodium dodecyl sulfate [SDS], 1% bromophenol blue) prior to separation in SDS-10%
polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) gels. Equal loading was
confirmed by measurement of total protein in whole-cell sonicates using
the Micro BCA Protein Assay (Pierce Chemical Co., Rockford, Ill.). After transfer to Immobilon P membranes (Millipore Co., Bedford, Mass.), immunoblotting was carried out with an antibody raised against
PhoA and detected with an antiserum to rabbit immunoglobulin G
conjugated to alkaline phosphatase as described previously
(43).
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RESULTS |
Bactericidal effect of S. pneumoniae on H. influenzae.
The hypothesis that pathogens inhabiting the same host
environment might generate growth-inhibitory substances was examined. Initial experiments tested the effect of culture supernatant of S. pneumoniae P394 and H. influenzae Rd on the
growth of the other species. Aliquots of culture supernatant filtrates
from one organism were added to a lawn of the other organism which had
been spread on solidified medium which supports the growth of only that
species. A zone of completely inhibited growth was observed when
supernatants from S. pneumoniae were added to lawns of
H. influenzae, while the inverse showed no observable effect
on growth (data not shown). This demonstrated that S. pneumoniae produced a substance that inhibited the growth of
H. influenzae. Similar results were obtained using three
nontypeable clinical isolates of H. influenzae, as well as
the type b isolate, Eagan. Likewise, unrelated S. pneumoniae clinical isolates of types 2, 6A, and 6B were all capable of inhibiting the above-mentioned strains of H. influenzae, demonstrating
that the observed effect was not strain specific.
To test whether this growth-inhibitory effect was also bactericidal,
both species were grown to mid-log phase and cocultured in liquid
medium. When 108 CFU of H. influenzae Rd per ml
were cocultured with 5 × 107 CFU of S. pneumoniae P394 per ml, the viable count of H. influenzae decreased to below detectable levels
(104 CFU/ml) within 3 h, whereas the viable count of
H. influenzae cultured in the absence of S. pneumoniae under the same conditions increased to
109 CFU/ml (Fig. 1). In
contrast, the viable count of S. pneumoniae increased to
108 CFU/ml, whether cultured with H. influenzae
or in the absence of H. influenzae. These observations
showed that the substance produced by S. pneumoniae was not
only inhibitory but also bactericidal against H. influenzae.

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FIG. 1.
Effect of coculture of S. pneumoniae P394 and
H. influenzae Rd. Following growth to mid-log phase,
H. influenzae was washed and incubated in sBHI containing
heat-inactivated catalase either with ( ) or without ( ) S. pneumoniae for the time indicated, and viable counts were
determined in duplicate on selective media. Viable counts of S. pneumoniae incubated in coculture with ( ) or without ( )
H. influenzae were determined in duplicate by plating on
selective media. The same amount of active catalase (1,000 U/ml) was
included during coculture of S. pneumoniae ( ) and
H. influenzae ( ). Values represent the average of three
independent determinations in duplicate, and the error bars represent
the standard deviations.
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In similar dose-response experiments, 107 CFU of S. pneumoniae per ml reduced the number of H. influenzae
from 108 to <104 CFU/ml within 3 h (Fig.
2). S. pneumoniae at
106 CFU/ml reduced the equivalent number of H. influenzae approximately 10-fold within 3 h. The growth of
the equivalent number of H. influenzae with
105 CFU of S. pneumoniae per ml was comparable
to that of H. influenzae grown in the absence of
S. pneumoniae.

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FIG. 2.
Dose-dependent killing of H. influenzae Rd by
S. pneumoniae P394. Following growth to mid-log phase,
H. influenzae was washed and cultured alone
(triangles) or with 105 (squares), 106
(circles), or 107 (diamonds) CFU of S. pneumoniae per ml and incubated in sBHI for the times indicated;
viable counts were determined on selective media. Values represent the
average of two independent determinations in duplicate.
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The bactericidal effect of S. pneumoniae is due to
hydrogen peroxide production.
Supernatants from cultures of
S. pneumoniae treated with proteinase K or heated to 65°C
for 20 min retained inhibitory activity, suggesting that the inhibitory
substance was not likely to be a protein (data not shown). In addition,
the inhibitory effect was diminished when S. pneumoniae was
grown under less-than-atmospheric levels of environmental oxygen (data
not shown). It had previously been shown that S. pneumoniae
makes substantial amounts of H2O2 when grown
aerobically (2, 34). It was therefore suspected that the
inhibitory effect of S. pneumoniae supernatant might be due
to H2O2 production. Further support for this
possibility came from the observation that the inhibitory effect was
inversely proportional to the level of hemin in the growth medium (data not shown). Hemin had previously been shown to mitigate the effects of
oxidative stress on H. influenzae, presumably because of its ability to decompose hydrogen peroxide (24, 27). Catalase, a
heme-containing enzyme which specifically degrades
H2O2, was then added to BHI plates at a
concentration of 200 U/ml. This eliminated the inhibitory effect of
S. pneumoniae culture supernatants on H. influenzae (data not shown).
The effect of catalase on the bactericidal activity of S. pneumoniae was then explored using quantitative coculture
experiments with bacteria grown in liquid medium. H. influenzae cultured with S. pneumoniae in the presence
of 1,000 U of catalase per ml grew at the same rate as H. influenzae cultured alone, whereas heat-inactivated catalase
(100°C for 20 min) was unable to eliminate the bactericidal activity
of S. pneumoniae (Fig. 1). To confirm that hydrogen peroxide was responsible for the bactericidal activity of the pneumococcus, 108 CFU of H. influenzae per ml were cocultured
with 5 × 107 CFU of an S. pneumoniae
strain per ml in which the pyruvate oxidase gene (spxB) was
insertionally inactivated. This mutant has previously been shown to
produce <1% of the H2O2 of its parent strain,
D39 (38). As expected, the spxB mutant was
unable to kill H. influenzae in coculture experiments, in
contrast to its parent strain D39 (Fig.
3). The growth of D39 and that of the
spxB mutant were indistinguishable under these conditions.

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FIG. 3.
Effect of coculture of H. influenzae Rd with
S. pneumoniae D39 and its spxB mutant, P878.
Following growth to mid-log phase, H. influenzae was washed
and incubated in sBHI alone ( ), with D39 ( ), or with P878 ( )
for the times indicated, and viable counts were determined in duplicate
on selective media. Viable counts of D39 ( ) or P878 ( ) incubated
in coculture with H. influenzae were determined in
duplicate by plating on selective media. Values represent the average
of three independent determinations in duplicate, and the error bars
represent the standard deviations.
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Bactericidal effect of S. pneumoniae on other
respiratory tract pathogens.
The inhibitory effect of S. pneumoniae was tested on two other common inhabitants of the human
respiratory tract: a clinical isolate of Moraxella
catarrhalis and an unencapsulated mutant of a type b
N. meningitidis strain (MC58C3). Catalase-reversible inhibition of N. meningitidis by supernatants from S. pneumoniae culture was observed on BHI agar. While an inhibitory
effect of pneumococcal supernatant was not seen on lawns of
M. catarrhalis, cross-streaking of S. pneumoniae and M. catarrhalis on BHI agar revealed
a catalase-reversible inhibitory effect on M. catarrhalis only in the immediate vicinity of S. pneumoniae. Coculture experiments to examine the bactericidal
effect on these species showed that 108 CFU of N. meningitidis per ml incubated with 5 × 107
CFU/ml S. pneumoniae for 1.5 h resulted in a
catalase-reversible 45 ± 19% decrease in viable count compared
to N. meningitidis cultured in the absence of S. pneumoniae (Fig. 4). M. catarrhalis grown at 108 CFU/ml in the presence of
5 × 107 CFU of S. pneumoniae per ml for
3 h resulted in a catalase-reversible 43 ± 21% decrease in
viable counts compared to M. catarrhalis grown alone (Fig.
4). In contrast, the viable count of S. pneumoniae increased
substantially when grown with either N. meningitidis or
M. catarrhalis compared to S. pneumoniae grown
alone (Fig. 4).

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FIG. 4.
Effect of coculture of S. pneumoniae P394
with either M. catarrhalis (Bc1) or N. meningitidis (MC58C3). Following growth to mid-log phase, S. pneumoniae (P394) was washed and incubated in BHI alone, with
N. meningitidis (MC58C3) for 1.5 h, or with M. catarrhalis (Bc1) for 3 h. Viable counts of N. meningitidis (stippled bar) or M. catarrhalis (hatched
bar) incubated in coculture with S. pneumoniae were
determined in duplicate by plating on selective media. Viable counts of
S. pneumoniae in coculture with N. meningitidis
(black bar) or M. catarrhalis (white bar) were determined in
duplicate on selective media. Values represent the change in viable
count expressed as a percentage of a control culture containing that
organism alone. Values are the average of three experiments, and error
bars represent the standard deviations.
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Hydrogen peroxide production and sensitivity to hydrogen
peroxide.
The relative sensitivities of S. pneumoniae
P394 and the three other respiratory tract pathogens to hydrogen
peroxide were examined using quantitative H2O2
challenge assays (Fig. 5). After a 30-min
exposure to 0.1 mM H2O2, the survival of
S. pneumoniae, M. catarrhalis, and N. meningitidis was unaffected, whereas the number of viable H. influenzae decreased by approximately twofold. At a concentration
of 1.0 mM H2O2, the survival of S. pneumoniae and M. catarrhalis was unaffected,
whereas the number of H. influenzae decreased approximately
2,000-fold, and the number of N. meningitidis decreased
approximately 20-fold. At a concentration of 10 mM
H2O2, H. influenzae and
N. meningitidis decreased to undetectable levels (<100 CFU/ml), whereas the number of S. pneumoniae
decreased only threefold, and M. catarrhalis was unaffected.

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FIG. 5.
Effect of H2O2 on the survival
of S. pneumoniae (P394), M. catarrhalis (Bc1),
N. meningitidis (MC58C3), and H. influenzae (Rd).
Following growth to mid-log phase, S. pneumoniae (black
bars), M. catarrhalis (white bars), N. meningitidis (stippled bars), or H. influenzae (hatched
bars) were washed and incubated at 37°C in BHI or sBHI containing the
indicated concentration of H2O2. After 30 min,
viable counts were determined on BHI or sBHI plates containing 200 U of
catalase per ml. Values represent the average of three independent
determinations in duplicate, and the error bars represent the standard
deviations. *, Below the limit of detection.
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A survey of bacterial species was made to determine if the levels of
hydrogen peroxide production and resistance exhibited by S. pneumoniae are unusual among human pathogens. Of the species tested for peroxide generation, only S. pneumoniae isolates
exhibited production of detectable levels (>0.1 mM) of hydrogen
peroxide using a horseradish peroxidase-phenol red assay (Table 1).
Survival in different concentrations of exogenously added
H2O2 varied widely among the species of
gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria tested. The species most
susceptible to growth inhibition and killing by
H2O2 was H. influenzae (MIC, 0.4 mM;
MBC, 0.5 mM). N. meningitidis was also relatively sensitive
(MIC, 0.4 mM; MBC, 5.0 mM). M. catarrhalis was relatively
insensitive to the effects of hydrogen peroxide (MIC, 1.1 mM; MBC, 160 mM). The pneumococcus was also relatively insensitive (MIC, 1.6 mM;
MBC, 80 mM), thus explaining its ability to survive endogenously
produced hydrogen peroxide.
Factors affecting hydrogen peroxide production by S. pneumoniae.
Strains P62 and P64, two naturally occurring phase
variants of the same strain, were tested for
H2O2 production after it was determined by
comparison of two-dimensional gel electrophoresis of whole bacterial
proteins followed by microsequencing that the major difference in
whole-cell protein expression was in the higher SpxB expression in P64
compared to P62 (Fig. 6, insert) (Overweg et al., submitted). Phase variation in SpxB expression correlated with
difference in H2O2 generation, with P64
producing significant amounts of H2O2, whereas
production by P62 was undetectable (Table 1). The bactericidal effect
of these variants on H. influenzae was then compared in
coculture experiments (Fig. 6). After 1.5 h of coculture, the
decrease in the viable counts of H. influenzae in the
presence of P64 was approximately 100-fold, whereas P62 had no effect.

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FIG. 6.
Effect of coculture of H. influenzae Rd with
S. pneumoniae opaque (P62) or transparent (P64) variants of
a type 9V isolate. Following growth to mid-log phase, H. influenzae was washed and incubated in sBHI either alone ( ),
with P62 ( ), or with P64 ( ) for the times indicated, and viable
counts were determined in duplicate on selective media. Viable counts
of P62 ( ) or P64 ( ) incubated in coculture with H. influenzae were determined in duplicate by plating on selective
media. Values represent the average of three independent determinations
in duplicate, and the error bars represent the standard deviations.
(Inset) Relative expression of SpxB in S. pneumoniae
variants P62 (black bar) and P64 (hatched bar) as determined by
two-dimensional gel electrophoresis followed by mass spectrometric
analysis. Results represent the average of four independent
experiments, with error bars representing the standard deviations.
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The production of H2O2 by the pneumococcus
correlated with the concentration of O2 in the environment,
being decreased in microaerobic conditions (data not shown). In order
to determine the effect of environmental oxygen on SpxB expression,
Western blots were performed on lysates from strain P878, which
contains an in-frame fusion of PhoA to SpxB, using an antibody to
bacterial alkaline phosphatase. Equal amounts of whole-cell lysates of
P878 cultured under various concentrations of O2 and
CO2 were separated by SDS-PAGE, transferred to a membrane,
and immunoblotted. A band corresponding to the SpxB-PhoA fusion protein
was detected in samples grown aerobically but was almost completely
absent from samples grown anaerobically (Fig.
7). The highest level of expression of
SpxB was noted in the conditions of high oxygen and increased carbon
dioxide, which correspond to the conditions expected of the mucosal
surface of the respiratory tract.

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FIG. 7.
Western blot showing the effect of environmental oxygen
and carbon dioxide tension on pyruvate oxidase (SpxB) expression in
S. pneumoniae P878, which contains an in-frame fusion to
PhoA. Cell lysates of spxB::phoA mutant
(P878) grown under 20% O2-0.03% CO2 (lane
1), 17% O2-3% CO2 (lane 2), or <0.01%
O2-10% CO2 (lane 3) were electrophoresed on
an SDS-10% polyacrylamide gel, transferred to a polyvinylidene
difluoride membrane, and immunoblotted with an antibody to PhoA. As a
negative control, cell lysates from the parent strain (D39) grown under
17% O2-3% CO2 (lane 4) were included. Size
markers are in kilodaltons.
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 |
DISCUSSION |
This study documents the production of a soluble antimicrobial
substance by S. pneumoniae. Several lines of evidence
demonstrate that this substance is hydrogen peroxide. The effect of the
pneumococcus in coculture experiments was completely eliminated by the
addition of active but not inactivated catalase. A similar
antimicrobial effect was reproduced by the addition of exogenous
H2O2 at concentrations shown to be generated by
the pneumococcus in liquid culture. This effect, furthermore, was
absent in a pyruvate oxidase (spxB) mutant that synthesizes
<1% of parental levels of H2O2 as well as a
spontaneous variant that is downregulated in expression of SpxB
(Overweg et al., submitted). Anaerobic growth conditions also lead to a
diminished expression of SpxB which correlated with a loss of
antimicrobial effect (data not shown). Finally, the degree of
antimicrobial effect against three species was proportional to their
sensitivity to both growth inhibition and killing mediated by exogenous
hydrogen peroxide.
Among the gram-positive (n = 6) and gram-negative
(n = 7) species tested, the pneumococcus was the only
species that generated concentrations of H2O2
that were >0.1 mM in liquid culture when at mid-log phase growth in
aerobic conditions. For one of the S. pneumoniae strains
tested, the average H2O2 concentration after 1 h of culture was 1.1 mM. This is consistent with the observation that S. pneumoniae produce approximately the same amount of
H2O2 per gram of total cellular protein as
neutrophils during the oxidative burst (15). The calculated
concentrations of H2O2 produced by S. pneumoniae in the present study agree with those
previously reported for this species (2, 5, 38). Our
results, furthermore, confirmed that the spxB mutant was
deficient in H2O2 production (38).
The mechanism that allows for the survival and growth of the
pneumococcus, a catalase-negative organism, in substantial concentrations of hydrogen peroxide is unknown. S. pneumoniae contains NADH oxidase but lacks other systems involved
in the oxidative stress response, such as OxyR (3). It was
noted in this study that the mutant deficient in pyruvate oxidase
activity often grew to a higher density in liquid culture. A
similar effect on pneumococcal growth in liquid culture was observed in
the presence of exogenous catalase and in coculture with M. catarrhalis or N. meningitidis, species that both
produce high levels of catalase (37). Furthermore, the
pneumococcus requires catalase for optimal growth on solid surfaces
where the density of organisms is high (42). These
observations support previous findings that endogenous production of
hydrogen peroxide is permissive for growth but may have an adverse
effect on its rate (2, 20, 34). This negative effect of
hydrogen peroxide on growth raises the question as to why the
pneumococcus, an organism that does not express catalase activity,
synthesizes copious amounts of this highly toxic substance. It has been
suggested that H2O2 generated by S. pneumoniae contributes to the pathogenesis of disease in the
respiratory tract by its cytotoxic effects on the epithelial barrier of
the host (15, 19). This effect, however, required
108 CFU/ml, a density of bacteria unlikely to occur in
the commensal state for this organism. In contrast, the antimicrobial
effect was evident in coculture experiments with as few as
106 CFU/ml. Data presented here support the hypothesis that
the pneumococcus generates unusually high amounts of hydrogen peroxide
as a means of inhibiting and/or killing other species that may compete
for the same environmental niche in the heavily colonized human nasopharynx.
Many lactic acid bacteria produce significant amounts of hydrogen
peroxide during aerobic growth (50). In fact, several species of lactobacilli and oral streptococci have been shown to
produce levels of H2O2 in liquid culture
similar to that of S. pneumoniae (1 to 10 mM) (5,
16, 18, 47). Organisms shown to be killed or inhibited in vitro
due to peroxide production by lactic acid bacteria include
Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Staphylococcus aureus,
Corynebacterium diphtheriae, and various other members of
the oral flora (13, 16, 41, 50, 52). In the case of the
pneumococcus, Colebrook was the first to describe its inhibitory activity by cross-streaking it with N. meningitidis and
M. catarrhalis on solid medium (11).
Similarly, McLeod and Gordon reported in 1922 the inhibition of growth
of S. aureus due to S. pneumoniae culture supernatants, an effect they attributed to the presence of
hydrogen peroxide (34). Our own study was able to take
advantage of a genetically defined mutant that is essentially deficient in H2O2 production to confirm this hypothesis
about the nature of the inhibitory substance generated by S. pneumoniae (38). Moreover, we demonstrate here that
this antimicrobial effect may be a factor in the ability of the
pneumococcus to compete against the other major pathogens residing in
the upper respiratory tract of humans. The antimicrobial effect of the
pneumococcus against three gram-negative, catalase-positive species
that also colonize the mucosal surface of the human nasopharynx was
assessed. The most dramatic effect was seen in coculture experiments
with H. influenzae, where there was a 4-log decline in
viable counts over 3 h due to the presence of 5 × 107 CFU of S. pneumoniae per ml. This was
the most sensitive bacterial species among those tested to both the
inhibitory and the bactericidal effects of the pneumococcus. If a
similar effect occurs in vivo, this could at least in part account for
the previously noted lower-than-expected rates of coinfection with
S. pneumoniae and H. influenzae in
otitis media and chronic bronchitis (25, 30). The inhibitory
and bactericidal effects of H2O2 on
H. influenzae occur despite the measurable expression
of catalase by this species (8). In other words, a
catalase-negative species, S. pneumoniae, is
able to efficiently kill a catalase-positive species,
H. influenzae, using H2O2. The level of catalase activity as
measured by the ability to catalyze the decomposition of hydrogen
peroxide, however, varies widely from species to species, and
H. influenzae seems to be an example of a
catalase-positive organism with relatively low catalase activity as
measured in vitro (7, 33). H. influenzae possesses only one gene for catalase, unlike the other gram-negative species E. coli, Salmonella enterica serovar
Typhimurium, and Shigella flexneri, which produce two
catalases (8). A previously reported
catalase-deficient mutant of H. influenzae,
strain AB2593 (Rd::hktE
)
was not significantly more sensitive to the antimicrobial effect of the
pneumococcus compared to its parent strain, implying that catalase does
little to protect H. influenzae under these
conditions (data not shown) (8). H. influenzae may possess an impaired ability to upregulate catalase
production in response to elevated levels of
H2O2, possibly as a result of H. influenzae's inability to synthesize protoporphyrin IX, the
biosynthetic precursor of heme, a required component of catalase
(48). This finding is consistent with the observation
that 108 CFU of exponentially growing
H. influenzae produce only 5.7 U of catalase, and
this expression level is induced only threefold by oxidative
stress (8). Furthermore, the addition of H. influenzae to cultures of S. pneumoniae had only a
small effect on the hydrogen peroxide concentration, suggesting that
the endogenous production of catalase by H. influenzae
was insufficient for these levels of H2O2 (data
not shown). The effect of the pneumococcus was less dramatic against
the meningococcus, where growth inhibition and minimal killing were
observed after 1.5 h of coculture. When M. catarrhalis, a target species with markedly greater catalase
activity, was tested, only a slight inhibitory bactericidal effect was
evident after 3 h of coculture, although a catalase-reversible
effect was noted with a higher density of pneumococci when the
two organisms were cross-streaked on BHI agar.
In considering the contribution of hydrogen peroxide production to
pneumococcal carriage, it should be noted that the studies presented
here are based exclusively on in vitro effects. The synthesis of
H2O2 by the pneumococcus in vivo has not been
determined, although maximal expression of SpxB was noted in an oxygen
and carbon dioxide rich environment, as would be expected on the
surface of the upper respiratory tract. In addition, the antimicrobial effect correlated with variability in the expression of SpxB and was
present in a variant with a transparent colony phenotype but not the
opaque variant of the same isolate (Overweg et al., submitted). Only
the transparent form has been shown to persistently colonize the
nasopharynx in an animal model of carriage (42). This
suggests that the increased production of H2O2
associated with this phenotype may contribute to its ability to
efficiently colonize a host, whereas the opaque phenotype may be
outcompeted by the other flora. Another consideration in extrapolating
these results to the situation in vivo is that host factors on the
mucosal surface may act to inactivate bacterial hydrogen
peroxide. In this regard, viridans streptococci, which may
generate concentrations of hydrogen peroxide similar to that of
S. pneumoniae, have been suggested to prevent colonization of gram-negative bacilli, including H. influenzae, in the human oropharynx by a mechanism that may be
mediated in part by H2O2 production (39,
40). In addition, the spxB mutant of S. pneumoniae does not persist within the airway in an animal model
of colonization in rabbits (38). Although the mechanism for
this defect in carriage is unknown and there are several plausible explanations, it is possible that it results from an inability of the
mutant to suppress local competitors. Future studies will address the
significance of these observations to pneumococcal carriage and the
maintenance of the normal microflora of the upper respiratory tract.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank H. R. Masure for providing strain P878
(D39 spxB mutant) and W. R. Bishai for providing strain
AB2593 (Rd::hktE
). Expert
technical assistance was provided by Miki Kapoor and Gregory Moy.
This work was supported by grants from the Sophia Foundation for
Medical Research (grant 183) and the U.S. Public Health Service (AI38436 and AI44231).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: 301B Johnson
Pavilion, Department of Microbiology, University of Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia, PA 19104-6076. Phone: (215) 573-3511. Fax: (215)
898-9557. E-mail: weiser{at}mail.med.upenn.edu.
Editor:
E. I. Tuomanen
 |
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