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Infection and Immunity, July 2003, p. 3782-3786, Vol. 71, No. 7
0019-9567/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.71.7.3782-3786.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Laboratory of Bacterial Pathogenesis and Immunology, Rockefeller University, New York, New York 10021
Received 22 January 2003/ Accepted 26 March 2003
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10% of the total genome and encode a wide variety of putative and established virulence factors, including a large class of pyrogenic exotoxins (10, 24). Recent comparative genomic studies have demonstrated that streptococcal bacteriophage represent the major variation (up to 71%) between strains of S. pyogenes (3, 21) and potentially account for the distinct disease pathologies associated with otherwise similar strains. In addition to modulating the virulence of organisms found within a common species of pathogenic bacteria, toxin-encoding phage produced by such pathogens have been shown to toxin convert both environmental and commensal bacteria, generating pathogenic Tox+ microbes (4, 9, 19). Thus, bacteriophage represent key vectors for the dissemination of bacterial virulence and the conversion of bacteria from nonpathogenic to pathogenic. While integrated prophage are well-documented sources of genetic diversity within the bacterial population, the events that ultimately result in this diversity have not been observed. We have previously shown that the human pharyngeal cell releases a soluble factor that stimulates the lytic activation of S. pyogenes prophage (6). During streptococcal disease, it is likely that phage are induced in vivo (1, 12, 13, 23). In the present study, we demonstrate that the mammalian host promotes both efficient bacteriophage induction at the mucosal surface and the subsequent lysogenic conversion of flora occupying the same niche. Thus, we establish that the continuing evolution and phage-mediated diversification of streptococci not only occur at the mucosal surface but are dependent on it.
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CS112 Tox+ Kmr) mutant.
Allelic exchange of the kanamycin resistance-encoding gene aacA (also called aphD) for the phage-encoded nonessential spd1 gene in S. pyogenes strain CS112 (an M- phenotypic variant of CS110 type M76 [22]) was achieved via homologous recombination. A PCR was used to amplify a 1-kb DNA element (with engineered 5' HindIII and 3' XbaI sites) from immediately upstream of the structural spd1 gene. The PCR product was directionally ligated into HindIII/XbaI-digested plasmid pBAD18 and then transformed into Escherichia coli XL1-Blue. The resultant plasmid was then digested with KpnI/EcoRI and ligated with a 1-kb PCR product (with engineered 5' KpnI and 3' EcoRI sites) that was amplified from immediately downstream of spd1. This pBAD18 recombinant plasmid was then digested with SmaI and ligated with the SmaI/AluI pFW13 fragment containing the aacA kanamycin resistance gene (18). The final plasmid, containing the aacA gene flanked by the upstream and downstream elements of spd1, was linearized by HindIII digestion, and the linear product was separated by agarose gel electrophoresis, followed by DNA gel extraction purification. This purified linear DNA was used to transform S. pyogenes strain CS112 in accordance with the protocol of Simon and Ferretti (20). Potential Spd1- mutants were selected for on Proteose Peptone blood agar plates containing 150 µg of kanamycin per ml. Several Kmr clones were picked, and PCR amplification with oligonucleotides designed to anneal upstream and downstream of the spd1 gene was used to verify the appropriate-size product for a double-recombination event resulting in the complete deletion of spd1.
In vitro lysogenic conversion experiments.
Detroit 562 human pharyngeal cells were grown to confluence in six-well plates and then washed three times with serum-free minimal essential medium (MEM). S. pyogenes strains CS112(
CS112 Tox+ Kmr) and CS24 Smr (type M12 [22]) were grown overnight in Todd-Hewitt broth containing 1% yeast extract (THY) at 37°C and suspended in phosphate-buffered saline. After adjustment of the optical density at 650 nm to 1.0, the bacteria were centrifuged and resuspended in serum-free MEM. The pharyngeal cells were then inoculated with
108 CFU of each bacterial strain. The mixed bacterial and pharyngeal cell coculture was allowed to incubate for 3 h at 37°C under 5% CO2. Each well was treated with 0.25% trypsin and 0.0125% Triton X-100 to lyse the pharyngeal cells and collect any bacteria that might have adhered to the cell surface. This lysate was pooled with the supernatant from the same well, and dilutions were plated on Proteose Peptone blood agar plates containing either kanamycin (150 µg/ml), streptomycin (200 µg/ml), or both antibiotics (150 and 200 µg/ml, respectively). The number of phage-lysogenized recipient strains [i.e., CS24 Smr(
CS112 Tox+ Kmr)] was defined as the total number of CFU demonstrating a double-antibiotic resistance phenotype. Thus, the frequency of lysogenization was determined as the ratio of the number of Smr Kmr CFU to the total number of Smr CFU. Additionally, the phage donor and recipient strains, CS112(
CS112 Tox+ Kmr) and CS24 Smr, were mixed in the absence of pharyngeal cells, as well as independently of each other. Lysogenization frequencies were determined for these experiments as well.
To test the effects of pharyngeal cell culture supernatant on streptococcal lysogenic conversion, we performed experiments in which the phage donor and recipient bacteria were incubated in cell-free spent pharyngeal cell supernatant. Detroit 562 pharyngeal cells were grown to confluence and then incubated in serum-free MEM for 3 h at 37°C under 5% CO2. The spent medium was collected and centrifuged (4,000 x g for 30 min). Strain CS112(
CS112 Tox+ Kmr) and CS24 Smr cells were incubated in this medium, and newly lysogenized bacteria were enumerated by the acquired antibiotic resistance phenotype.
To determine if the pharyngeal cells promoted lysogenic conversion by sensitizing the phage recipient bacteria to the temperate phage, we performed the following experiment. Confluent Detroit 562 pharyngeal cells were inoculated with
108 CFU of CS24 Smr bacteria. Following a 30-min incubation at 37°C under 5% CO2, we inoculated the coculture with
105 PFU of cell-free
CS112 Tox+ Kmr and then allowed the mixture to further incubate for another 3 h. As a control, the same experiment was performed with no pharyngeal cells present. Following the incubations, frequencies of newly lysogenized bacteria were determined as previously described.
Phage lysogenization in vivo.
Experiments were performed to determine if the murine airway could support the lysogenization events observed in vitro. S. pyogenes strains CS112(
CS112 Tox+ Kmr) and CS24 Smr were grown overnight, washed in phosphate-buffered saline, and adjusted to an optical density at 650 nm of 2.0. The strains were mixed 1:1 (vol/vol), and the mixture was used to oronasally challenge (30 µl orally, 30 µl nasally) four 6-week-old female BALB/c mice. After 24 h, the mice were orally swabbed and the swabs were streaked onto Proteose Peptone blood agar plates containing kanamycin (150 µg/ml), streptomycin (200 (µg/ml), or both antibiotics (150 µg/ml and 200 µg/ml, respectively). Additionally, the mice were euthanized and decapitated. Each mouse head was incubated in THY broth containing both kanamycin (150 µg/ml) and streptomycin (200 µg/ml) to enrich for any lysogens that might have been created but were not detectable by oral swabbing. Following overnight incubation, the broth was streaked onto Proteose Peptone blood agar plates containing kanamycin and streptomycin. These plates were then incubated, and beta-hemolytic Smr Kmr colonies were identified.
In vivo toxigenic conversion with isolated phage.
Four 6-week-old female BALB/c mice were challenged with S. pyogenes strain CS24 Smr as described previously. After 6 h, each mouse was challenged with 60 µl of sterile filtered
CS112 Tox+ Kmr (107 PFU/ml). After 24 h, we detected Kmr lysogens by oral swabbing or by enrichment from within the mouse head, as described earlier.
Genetic analysis of the Smr Kmr phenotype.
To discount the possibility that random mutation gave rise to the observed phenotypes of the lysogenized species, genetic analysis of each strain was performed. Genomic DNA was extracted from S. pyogenes CS112(
CS112 Tox+ Kmr), CS24 Smr, and the strains designated CS112(
CS112 Tox+ Kmr) that were selected as converted lysogens following incubations in a pharyngeal cell coculture, pharyngeal cell supernatant, and the mouse nasopharynx. Genomic DNA samples served as the templates for PCR amplification of the phage-encoded speC and int1 genes, which served as markers for the integrated
CS112 prophage. Additionally, oligonucleotide primers (17) were used to PCR amplify the variable-length emm gene from each S. pyogenes strain. The genetic traits of the Smr Kmr strains, thought to be CS24 Smr(
CS112 Tox+ Kmr), were compared to the traits of the two parental strains.
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CS112 Tox+), containing the streptococcal pyrogenic exotoxin C gene within an inducible prophage, served as a phage donor. A gene encoding Kmr was inserted into the
CS112 Tox+ genome [CS112(
CS112 Tox+ Kmr)] for use as a selectable marker for detection of toxin-converted species by an acquired Kmr phenotype.
Cultured pharyngeal cells were then inoculated with both phage donor strain CS112(
CS112 Tox+ Kmr) and nonlysogenized, streptomycin-resistant S. pyogenes strain CS24 Smr, which served as the phage recipient. During a 3-h coculture, we detected the induction of the donor phage
CS112 Tox+ Kmr (
105 phage/ml) and subsequent lysogenization of the phage-naive recipient strain, CS24 Smr, creating the double-antibiotic-resistant toxigenic organism CS24 Smr(
CS112 Tox+ Kmr). Lysogenic conversion of CS24 Smr occurred at a frequency of 1.46 x 10-5. Additionally, incubation of the phage donor and recipient strains in cell-free pharyngeal supernatant (i.e., conditions that we have previously shown to promote phage induction [6]) yielded a similar lysogenization frequency of 1.33 x 10-5 (Fig. 1). This horizontal transfer could not be detected after incubation of both CS112(
CS112 Tox+ Kmr) and CS24 Smr for 3 h in minimal medium without serum or THY broth (Fig. 1) and was therefore dependent on the pharyngeal cells. Similar results were obtained in minimal medium containing serum (data not shown). Although these phage transfer events were rare, they were significant (P < 0.001) compared to the conversion frequency in culture medium alone. Additionally, the induced phage titer is
1,000 times lower than the streptococcal CFU concentration, meaning that, of the
108 phage recipient streptococci present, a maximum of
105 could be infected by the temperate phage. Using these considerations, we calculated the frequency of lysogenization per singly infected bacterium to be
10-3, meaning that 1 in every 1,000 streptococci that are infected with
CS112 Tox+ Kmr becomes lysogenized.
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FIG. 1. Pharyngeal-cell-mediated horizontal gene transfer. The frequency of lysogenized recipient bacteria is plotted for phage transfer events occurring in minimal medium, THY broth, pharyngeal cell coculture, or pharyngeal cell supernatant. The values plotted are mean concentrations of duplicate experiments ± the standard deviations.
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CS112 Tox+ Kmr bacteriophage and then determined respective frequencies of lysogenization. No significant differences were found (data not shown). These results indicate that the increase in lysogenization frequency observed during pharyngeal cell coculture (Fig. 1) resulted entirely from the induction of bacteriophage that subsequently lysogenized naive bacteria.
Lysogenic conversion in vivo.
Horizontal transfer of
CS112 Tox+ Kmr was tested in vivo with a murine model of streptococcal colonization. Essentially, BALB/c mice were challenged oronasally with the phage donor [CS112(
CS112 Tox+ Kmr)] and phage recipient (CS24 Smr) strains used in the experiments described above. We failed to detect horizontal phage transfer (S. pyogenes with the Smr Kmr phenotype) by oral swabbing at 24 h (Table 1), which was likely attributable to the limitations of the swab recovery technique and its inability to efficiently capture rare or hidden organisms. The coinfected mice were euthanized at 24 h, and each separated mouse head was then incubated in THY medium to which kanamycin and streptomycin were added. After overnight incubation, we successfully enriched and detected the lysogenized CS24 Smr(
CS112 Tox+ Kmr) strain in two of four mice. As a control, the CS24 Smr and CS112(
CS112 Tox+ Kmr) strains were mixed together in kanamycin-streptomycin broth. Following an 18-h incubation, no growth was detected, indicating that spontaneous lysogenic conversion did not occur during the overnight lysogen enrichment step. The same results were obtained when this control experiment was performed in the presence of a mouse head, verifying that the lysogenized organisms were created within the viable mouse naso- and oropharynx during the initial challenge.
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TABLE 1. In vivo lysogenic conversion assay results
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CS112 Tox+ Kmr). At 24 h after the phage challenge, we attempted to identify lysogenized organisms (marked by Smr Kmr) either by throat swabbing or by further enrichment of Smr Kmr organisms from within the mouse head. While we again were unable to detect any newly lysogenized species via throat swabbing, we did detect such lysogens following enrichment in three of four mice (Table 1).
Genetic characterization of lysogenized bacteria.
By using antibiotic resistance as an acquired and selective phenotype, we were able to demonstrate horizontal transfer of a toxin-encoding phage within S. pyogenes during incubation in pharyngeal cell cocultures, as well as in the murine nasopharynx itself. Additionally, we show that the same lysogenic conversion occurred within the mouse when bacteria were challenged with isolated phage alone. To discount the possibility that random mutation gave rise to the acquired antibiotic resistance phenotypes, we performed genetic analyses of each of these newly formed lysogens. Because the S. pyogenes emm gene varies in size from strain to strain (15), we amplified this gene by PCR to distinguish the phage donor strain from the phage recipient and lysogenized derivatives thereof. PCR performed on the emm gene from phage donor strain CS112(
CS112 Tox+ Kmr) generated a 950-bp fragment, whereas amplification of the emm gene from recipient strain CS24 Smr and each of the suspected lysogenized strains, CS24 Smr(
CS112 Tox+ Kmr), generated 1.5-kb products (Fig. 2). Furthermore, PCR amplification of the speC gene phage marker verified the presence of the integrated prophage in the donor strain and in each of the lysogenized strains but not in the parental recipient strain (Fig. 2). PCR amplification of the int1 gene, a gene located on the opposite end of the integrated prophage, substantiated the presence of the fully integrated phage. These results, taken together, verify that the bacteria with the acquired double antibiotic resistance phenotype were the anticipated Tox+ lysogenized organisms and not the result of spontaneous mutation.
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FIG. 2. Analysis of S. pyogenes lysogens. CS112( CS112 Tox+ Kmr) is the parent phage donor strain. CS24 Smr is the parent recipient strain. CS24 Smr( CS112 Tox+ Kmr) is the designation of the newly formed lysogens generated during pharyngeal cell coculture (Coculture), during mixed bacterial culture within the mouse nasopharynx (Mouse/mixed), or following isolated phage challenge of a colonized mouse (Mouse/phage). (a) PCR amplification of the variable-length emm gene from each strain. (b) PCR amplification of the speC gene to detect the integrated prophage. (c) PCR amplification of the int1 gene to further detect the integrated prophage. Molecular sizes are shown on the left.
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The upper respiratory mucosal site is at least one location where lysogenic exchange occurs. Such surfaces often constitute the sole environmental reservoir for a number of pathogenic bacteria (e.g., S. pyogenes, S. pneumoniae, and Haemophilus influenzae). Thus, for successful propagation and survival, temperate phage must reach the mucosal site to access and infect the reservoir of potentially phage-sensitive organisms. For example, a carrier survey of Corynebacterium diphtheriae suggests that spread of the tox gene to infected individuals occurred via phage conversion of a pre-existing colonizing organism, rather than by colonization of those individuals with the challenge strain (16). In the case of S. pyogenes,
50% of strains do not harbor a SpeC toxin phage (5) and, barring restriction by other, also related temperate phage, these organisms represent potential toxigenic-conversion targets within the human host. Our findings indicate that isolated phage may be transmitted between individuals, converting the environmental reservoir within the secondary host into a toxigenic population. Such bacteria may then proceed with a more pathogenic lifestyle, resulting in the potential for infection absent challenge from any exogenous microbe.
Up to 25% of S. pyogenes pharyngitis infections result in asymptomatic colonization of the human host, with the bacteria entering into a nonpathogenic carrier state (11). Our work indicates that when a colonized host is challenged with a lysogenized toxigenic strain, phage induction and subsequent toxigenic conversion of the carrier state bacteria can occur, resulting in a novel and potentially pathogenic derivative. Thus, previous work suggests and we provide evidence for the lysogenic conversion of virulence factors into pre-existing bacteria and the consequential creation of a unique pathogenic agent within the host itself.
Taken together, our results indicate that within the mammalian host, bacteria alter not only their gene expression profiles (14) but their genomes themselves. The bacterium-bacteriophage system is in a constant state of flux, with phage inducing from one bacterium and integrating into another. This is supported by data showing that the genome of S. pyogenes is saturated with integrated phage (up to eight integrants per chromosome [7]), which constitute a significant portion of the total genome. We have sought to understand the etiological events resulting in both the genetic diversity found within S. pyogenes and the development of streptococcal virulence itself. Our findings are substantiated by recent streptococcal genomic work indicating the differing outcomes of streptococcal infections to be based on the lysogenic status of the organism (3). Similar phage-based genetic diversity is found in a number of other bacteria, including Staphylococcus aureus (2), and it is likely that the mammalian host plays a similar role in the evolution of those systems as well. Thus, despite the absence of a direct interaction between phage and eukaryote, our findings suggest that in vivo phage conversion represents one method by which bacteriophage can have a direct impact on a mammalian host.
This work was supported by U.S. Public Health Service grant AI11822 to V.A.F.
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