George Niraj Procopio Evagrio, Konstantopoulos Konstantinos, Ross Julia Myers
Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering, University of Maryland Baltimore County, Baltimore, MD 21250, USA.
J Infect Dis. 2007 Aug 15;196(4):639-46. doi: 10.1086/519740. Epub 2007 Jun 29.
Staphylococcus aureus adhesion to platelets via microbial surface components recognizing adhesive matrix molecules (MSCRAMMs) is a critical first step in vascular infection. The molecular mechanisms governing adhesion are influenced by the repertoire of MSCRAMMs expressed on the bacterial surface and the fluid mechanical shear rates present in the vasculature. We compared the predominant adhesion mechanisms between early and late growth phase S. aureus under physiological shear conditions.
A parallel-plate flow chamber was used to quantify the adhesion of early and late growth phase S. aureus to immobilized platelet layers as a function of wall shear rate. Specifically, we evaluated the influence of clumping factor (Clf) A, ClfB, serine-aspartate repeats, fibronectin-binding proteins (Fnbps), and protein A in supporting S. aureus adhesion to platelets. The ability of the plasma proteins fibrinogen and fibronectin to act as bridging molecules was also investigated.
Our results demonstrate a markedly elevated binding efficiency for late growth phase staphylococci to immobilized platelets, compared with that of the early growth phase cells in the high shear regime. During the late growth phase, fibrinogen in concert with von Willebrand factor (vWF) potentiates S. aureus-platelet binding via shear-dependent mechanisms. By contrast, fibrinogen, but not vWF, supports the adhesion of early growth phase S. aureus at the high wall shear rates. During the early growth phase, ClfA is identified as the dominant staphylococcal adhesion receptor, with Fnbps playing a supporting role.
The results presented here demonstrate a differential mechanism and binding efficiency for the adhesion of early versus late growth phase S. aureus to immobilized platelets.
金黄色葡萄球菌通过识别黏附基质分子的微生物表面成分(MSCRAMMs)黏附于血小板是血管感染的关键第一步。黏附的分子机制受细菌表面表达的MSCRAMMs种类以及脉管系统中流体机械剪切速率的影响。我们比较了生理剪切条件下金黄色葡萄球菌生长早期和晚期的主要黏附机制。
使用平行板流动腔来量化生长早期和晚期的金黄色葡萄球菌对固定化血小板层的黏附情况,该黏附情况是壁面剪切速率的函数。具体而言,我们评估了聚集因子(Clf)A、ClfB、丝氨酸 - 天冬氨酸重复序列、纤连蛋白结合蛋白(Fnbps)和蛋白A在支持金黄色葡萄球菌黏附于血小板方面的作用。还研究了血浆蛋白纤维蛋白原和纤连蛋白作为桥接分子的能力。
我们的结果表明,与生长早期细胞相比,在高剪切状态下,生长晚期葡萄球菌对固定化血小板的结合效率显著提高。在生长晚期,纤维蛋白原与血管性血友病因子(vWF)协同作用,通过剪切依赖性机制增强金黄色葡萄球菌与血小板的结合。相比之下,在高壁面剪切速率下,纤维蛋白原而非vWF支持生长早期金黄色葡萄球菌的黏附。在生长早期,ClfA被确定为主要的葡萄球菌黏附受体,Fnbps起辅助作用。
本文给出的结果表明,金黄色葡萄球菌生长早期和晚期对固定化血小板的黏附存在不同的机制和结合效率。