Wu Hong, Jerse Ann E
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, 4301 Jones Bridge Rd., Bethesda, MD 20814-4799, USA.
Infect Immun. 2006 Jul;74(7):4094-103. doi: 10.1128/IAI.00433-06.
The addition of host-derived sialic acid to Neisseria gonorrhoeae lipooligosaccharide is hypothesized to be an important mechanism by which gonococci evade host innate defenses. This hypothesis is based primarily on in vitro assays of complement-mediated and phagocytic killing. Here we report that a nonpolar alpha-2,3-sialyltransferase (lst) mutant of N. gonorrhoeae was significantly attenuated in its capacity to colonize the lower genital tract of 17-beta estradiol-treated female BALB/c mice during competitive infection with the wild-type strain. Genetic complementation of the lst mutation restored recovery of the mutant to wild-type levels. Studies with B10.D2-HC(o)H2(d)H(2)-T18c/OSN (C5-deficient) mice showed that attenuation of the lst mutant was not due to increased sensitivity to complement-mediated bacteriolysis, a result that is consistent with recently reported host restrictions in the complement cascade. However, Lst-deficient gonococci were killed more rapidly than sialylated wild-type gonococci following intraperitoneal injection into normal mice, which is consistent with sialylation conferring protection against killing by polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs). As reported for human PMNs, sialylated gonococci were more resistant to killing by murine PMNs, and sialylation led to reduced association with and induction of a weaker respiratory burst in PMNs from estradiol-treated mice. In summary, these studies suggest sialylation confers a survival advantage to N. gonorrhoeae in mice by increasing resistance to PMN killing. This report is the first direct demonstration that alpha-2,3-sialyltransferase contributes to N. gonorrhoeae pathogenesis in an in vivo model. This study also validates the use of experimental murine infection to study certain aspects of gonococcal pathogenesis.
据推测,向淋病奈瑟菌脂寡糖中添加宿主来源的唾液酸是淋球菌逃避宿主固有防御的一种重要机制。这一假说主要基于补体介导的杀伤和吞噬杀伤的体外试验。在此,我们报告称,在与野生型菌株进行竞争性感染期间,淋病奈瑟菌的非极性α-2,3-唾液酸转移酶(lst)突变体在定殖于17-β雌二醇处理的雌性BALB/c小鼠下生殖道的能力上显著减弱。lst突变的基因互补使突变体的恢复能力恢复到野生型水平。对B10.D2-HC(o)H2(d)H(2)-T18c/OSN(C5缺陷)小鼠的研究表明,lst突变体的减弱并非由于对补体介导的细菌溶解敏感性增加,这一结果与最近报道的补体级联反应中的宿主限制一致。然而,将缺乏Lst的淋球菌腹腔注射到正常小鼠后,其被杀死的速度比唾液酸化的野生型淋球菌更快,这与唾液酸化赋予抵抗多形核白细胞(PMN)杀伤的保护作用一致。正如对人PMN的报道,唾液酸化的淋球菌对鼠PMN的杀伤更具抵抗力,并且唾液酸化导致与经雌二醇处理小鼠的PMN的结合减少以及诱导较弱的呼吸爆发。总之,这些研究表明唾液酸化通过增加对PMN杀伤的抵抗力,赋予淋病奈瑟菌在小鼠体内的生存优势。本报告首次直接证明α-2,3-唾液酸转移酶在体内模型中对淋病奈瑟菌的致病作用有贡献。本研究还验证了使用实验性小鼠感染来研究淋球菌致病机制某些方面的可行性。