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The GraS Sensor in Staphylococcus aureus Mediates Resistance to Host Defense Peptides Differing in Mechanisms of Action

Authors
Chaili, SiyangCheung, Ambrose L.Bayer, Arnold S.Xiong, Yan Q.Waring, Alan J.Memmi, GuidoDonegan, NilesYang, Soo-JinYeaman, Michael R.
Issue Date
Feb-2016
Publisher
AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
Citation
INFECTION AND IMMUNITY, v.84, no.2, pp 459 - 466
Pages
8
Journal Title
INFECTION AND IMMUNITY
Volume
84
Number
2
Start Page
459
End Page
466
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/7300
DOI
10.1128/IAI.01030-15
ISSN
0019-9567
1098-5522
Abstract
Staphylococcus aureus uses the two-component regulatory system GraRS to sense and respond to host defense peptides (HDPs). However, the mechanistic impact of GraS or its extracellular sensing loop (EL) on HDP resistance is essentially unexplored. Strains with null mutations in the GraS holoprotein (Delta graS) or its EL (Delta EL) were compared for mechanisms of resistance to HDPs of relevant immune sources: neutrophil alpha-defensin (human neutrophil peptide 1 [hNP-1]), cutaneous beta-defensin (human beta-defensin 2 [hBD-2]), or the platelet kinocidin congener RP-1. Actions studied by flow cytometry included energetics (ENR); membrane permeabilization (PRM); annexin V binding (ANX), and cell death protease activation (CDP). Assay conditions simulated bloodstream (pH 7.5) or phagolysosomal (pH 5.5) pH contexts. S. aureus strains were more susceptible to HDPs at pH 7.5 than at pH 5.5, and each HDP exerted a distinct effect signature. The impacts of Delta graS and Delta EL on HDP resistance were peptide and pH dependent. Both mutants exhibited defects in ANX response to hNP-1 or hBD-2 at pH 7.5, but only hNP-1 did so at pH 5.5. Both mutants exhibited hyper-PRM, -ANX, and -CDP responses to RP-1 at both pHs and hypo-ENR at pH 5.5. The actions correlated with Delta graS or Delta EL hypersusceptibility to hNP-1 or RP-1 (but not hBD-2) at pH 7.5 and to all study HDPs at pH 5.5. An exogenous EL mimic protected mutant strains from hNP-1 and hBD-2 but not RP-1, indicating that GraS and its EL play nonredundant roles in S. aureus survival responses to specific HDPs. These findings suggest that GraS mediates specific resistance countermeasures to HDPs in immune contexts that are highly relevant to S. aureus pathogenesis in humans.
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