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Infection and Immunity, June 2005, p. 3806-3809, Vol. 73, No. 6
0019-9567/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.73.6.3806-3809.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Medical Microbiology & Immunology, University of Wisconsin Medical School, Madison, Wisconsin 53706,1 LA Biomedical Research Institute at Harbor-UCLA, Torrance, California 90502,2 Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, California 900243
Received 2 September 2004/ Returned for modification 29 November 2004/ Accepted 27 January 2005
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A complex network of regulators encoded by agr, several two-component signal transduction systems, and at least six transcriptional regulators (SarA and the Sar homologues) function to control virulence factor expression (reviewed in reference 22). In vitro, this regulation is manifest in a temporal orchestration of the transcriptional signals that lead to the postexponential-phase repression of adhesin gene transcription and the parallel increase in the transcription of genes encoding many extracellular toxins and enzymes (23). In general, this transcriptional profile is mirrored by the temporal profiles of adhesin and extracellular protein expressions (5, 19, 23).
An important element in a unified model of virulence factor production is agr (22). This locus consists of divergently transcribed messages. One message, RNAII, encodes four proteins (AgrA, AgrB, AgrC, and AgrD), which are involved in an autoinducing pheromone-sensing signal transduction circuit. Two of the proteins, AgrC and AgrA, act as a histidine-kinase sensor and a response regulator, respectively. The autoactivating signal of the agr system is a cyclic thiolactone peptide pheromone modified from a prepeptide protein, AgrD. AgrB is the only known enzyme responsible for the modification and secretion of the peptide pheromone. The result of the increase in RNAII is increased activity of the RNAII-encoded activating circuit and the high-level transcription of the divergent agr message, a 514-ribonucleotide RNA known as RNAIII. RNAIII is a riboregulator associated with the differential expression of multiple structural genes involved in virulence factor production.
We previously identified rot in S. aureus strain PM614 (agr-null rot::Tn917) by transposon mutagenesis (16). We showed that a rot mutation by itself was not associated with a specific toxin-attenuated phenotype in S. aureus RN6390, an agr-positive strain. However, in PM614, the same transposon-induced rot mutation restored a quantifiable measure of toxin expression, presumably through an agr-independent mechanism (9). The rot gene product (Rot) is a member of the MarR family of winged-helix transcriptional regulators (pfam01047). In addition, by iterative BlastP searches, Rot has been shown to share homology with 12 proteins of the S. aureus genome, at least 6 of which have roles in virulence factor regulation (e.g., SarS, SarT, SarU, SarV, MgrA, and TcaR). Including Rot, these 13 homologous proteins are collectively referred to as "Sar homologues" (reviewed in reference 8).
A comparison of a rot-agr double mutant (rot::Tn917
agr) to an agr (
agr) mutant by DNA microarray analysis has shown that rot is associated with at least twofold negative and positive regulation of 60 and 86 genes, respectively (28). In addition to repressing the virulence factor genes responsible for protease and alpha-toxin activities, wild-type rot was inferred to negatively regulate ebhAB (genes encoding proteins that are similar to the streptococcal adhesin Emb), hlb (the gene encoding ß-toxin), hlgBC (the gene encoding components of
-toxin), and geh (the gene encoding glycerol ester hydrolase), while upregulating spa (the gene encoding staphylococcal protein A). In general, a wild-type allele of rot appears to confer a pattern of virulence factor gene regulation opposite to that seen with agr.
The present study was designed to determine whether the restored toxin phenotype of the rot-agr double mutant seen in vitro correlated with restored in vivo virulence relative to a wild-type strain and to rot and agr single mutants. For this purpose, we utilized the well-characterized rabbit infective endocarditis model (IE), which represents an acute multisystem infection (30).
We compared the virulences of S. aureus strains RN6390 (wild-type parental strain), PM466 (
agr single mutant), PM783 (rot::Tn917 single mutant), and PM614 (
agr-rot::Tn917 double mutant) in the rabbit IE model. Female outbred New Zealand White rabbits (Irish Farms, Corona, CA) underwent carotid-artery-to-left-ventricle catheterization as previously described (12, 24). For comparative virulence assessments, groups of 6 to 9 rabbits each received inocula of 5 x 104, 5 x 105, or 5 x 106 CFU of RN6390, PM466, PM783, or PM614. As established by pilot studies, these inocula encompassed the 95% infective dose for inducing IE for the parental strain used in this study. The challenge inocula were injected intravenously into the marginal ear vein at 48 h postcatheterization. At 48 h postinjection, the animals were sacrificed, and cardiac vegetations and kidneys (major target organs involved in experimental IE) were aseptically removed, homogenized, extensively sonicated, and quantitatively cultured (12, 30). Analysis included only animals with active IE as defined by the proper placement of the transaortic valve catheter and macroscopic, culture-positive vegetations. Data from the different strain groups (i.e., tissue bacterial densities) were analyzed by Kruskal-Wallis ANOVA with Tukey post hoc adjustments for multiple comparisons where appropriate. A P value of <0.05 was considered statistically significant.
For all animals, there were inoculum-dependent increases in vegetation and kidney staphylococcal densities (Table 1). At both 104 and 105 CFU (but not at 106 CFU) of challenge inocula, the extent of the staphylococcal proliferation in vegetations and kidneys was significantly less in animals infected with the agr mutant compared to those infected with the parental strain (RN6390). With strain PM783 (rot knockout mutant with no discernible phenotype distinct from the parental strain, in terms of alpha-toxin and other virulence factor production) (16), there were no significant differences in target tissue counts compared to those for animals infected with the parental strain, RN6390. Of note was the fact that infection with strain PM614 (rot-agr double mutant) resulted in the recovery of significantly higher numbers of bacteria from target tissues compared to infection with the agr mutant across the same challenge inoculum range. The level of bacterial recovery was similar to that seen with RN6390 and PM783. The P values for all pairwise comparisons that used challenge inocula of 104 and 105 CFU were <0.05.
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TABLE 1. Inoculum-dependent increases in cardiac vegetation and kidney staphylococcal densities
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The ability of microbial pathogens to initiate endovascular infections such as IE involves complex interactions between the organism and host tissues. The initial site to which endovascular pathogens adhere in order to initiate such infections is the sterile cardiac lesion. This lesion is a composite of endothelial cells, activated platelets, and matrix ligands such as fibrinogen, fibronectin, and fibrin and is relatively devoid of inflammatory cells (3). Thus, pathogens such as S. aureus possess a broad array of surface adhesins whose function it is to enable the organism to bind to one or more of these relevant tissues and matrix surfaces (18). In addition, toxins that lyse the major components of the infected vegetation (e.g., alpha-toxin, which causes platelet and endothelial cell lysis) (4) have been viewed as facilitators of the spread of the bacteria within the vegetations, leading to subsequent hematogenous dissemination of the pathogen.
In the context of this latter paradigm, we have previously studied the impact of alpha-toxin on the pathogenesis of experimental IE and demonstrated that inactivation of the alpha-toxin structural gene (hla) led to decreased in vivo virulence (3). In the present study, deletion of agr (which negatively impacts alpha-toxin production) was also associated with reduced virulence in this model. These latter data parallel those previously confirmed in an investigation on the negative impact of sarA and agr knockouts upon experimental endocarditis virulence (7). Furthermore, subsequent inactivation of the rot locus in the agr mutant background (which reconstitutes the capacity of the strain to produce alpha-toxin in vitro) correlated with the reestablishment of parental-level virulence in vivo.
We have shown in several prior virulence studies (in the same experimental model of IE using defined mutations in S. aureus RN6390) that at higher levels of challenge inocula (106 to 108 CFU), virulence differences observed for lower levels of challenge inocula tend to be mitigated (29). This has been hypothesized to relate to the great redundancy of endovascular virulence factors being maximally expressed at high inoculum levels (e.g., adhesins, capsules, etc.) that may well compensate for the genetic inactivation of individual virulence factors that are manifest at lower challenge inoculum levels. It is interesting that in the present study we observed this same phenomenon, by which there were substantive reductions in virulence at the two lower challenge inoculum levels used, which were abrogated at the highest challenge inoculum level (106 CFU).
In a larger context, the restoration of virulence of an agr-null mutant by a second mutation in rot, as seen in the present study, immediately suggests a mechanism for resistance to therapeutic agents designed to disrupt staphylococcal pathogenesis by suppressing agr activation and, subsequently, toxin production (reviewed in reference 25). For the suppression of agr, two strategies have been pursued. The first is the use of either naturally occurring or synthetic agr-inhibitory peptides (10, 13, 25). Such exogenous agr-inhibitory peptides appear to function by binding to AgrC without activating the AgrC-AgrA phosphorelay system, thus preventing the initiation of RNAIII synthesis by endogenous autoinducing peptides. The second is the use of antibodies against TRAP (target for RNA-activating peptide), a protein implicated in agr activation that is encoded outside of agr. The mechanism of virulence factor regulation by TRAP remains unclear (1, 11, 22).
Regardless of the mechanism of RNAIII inhibition, because a rot mutation is sufficient to restore full virulence to an agr mutant, S. aureus can be viewed as having a potential intrinsic mechanism for resistance to such strategies (i.e., a spontaneous mutation or downregulation in rot). This mechanism remains only theoretical to date. To address this potential adaptive response in vivo, future studies with agr mutants should evaluate (i) target organ counts over a longer postinfection period and (ii) in vivo selection of rot mutants.
As reviewed by Otto, targeting only agr to reduce virulence may have a number of limitations (25). For example, downregulation of agr results in the expression of factors that aid in the bacterial colonization that may play a role in persistent S. aureus infections. Furthermore, the loss of agr activity has been associated with strains possessing an increased capacity for biofilm formation and for attachment to polystyrene. These data suggest that the agr-negative strain may have a greater capacity to cause chronic infections than do agr-positive strains. It appears that agr-inhibiting peptides may best be viewed as an augmentative therapy or that alternative approaches, such as combining inhibitory agr pheromones with bactericidal agents or rot agonists, may represent better approaches to control S. aureus infections (27).
This work was supported by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases grants AI053235-01 to P.J.M. and 5R01AI039108-07 to A.S.B.
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