Department of Pathology, Creighton University Medical Center, 601 North 30th Street, Omaha, NE 68113, USA.
Infect Immun. 2011 Jan;79(1):474-85. doi: 10.1128/IAI.00910-09. Epub 2010 Oct 25.
Myeloperoxidase (MPO) is reported to selectively bind to bacteria. The present study provides direct evidence of MPO binding selectivity and tests the relationship of selective binding to selective killing. The microbicidal effectiveness of H(2)O(2) and of OCl(-) was compared to that of MPO plus H(2)O(2). Synergistic microbicidal action was investigated by combining Streptococcus sanguinis, a H(2)O(2)-producing microbe showing low MPO binding, with high-MPO-binding Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, or Pseudomonas aeruginosa without exogenous H(2)O(2), with and without MPO, and with and without erythrocytes (red blood cells [RBCs]). Selectivity of MPO microbicidal action was conventionally measured as the MPO MIC and minimal bactericidal concentration (MBC) for 82 bacteria including E. coli, P. aeruginosa, S. aureus, Enterococcus faecalis, Streptococcus pyogenes, Streptococcus agalactiae, and viridans streptococci. Both H(2)O(2) and OCl(-) destroyed RBCs at submicrobicidal concentrations. Nanomolar concentrations of MPO increased H(2)O(2) microbicidal action 1,000-fold. Streptococci plus MPO produced potent synergistic microbicidal action against all microbes tested, and RBCs caused only a small decrease in potency without erythrocyte damage. MPO directly killed H(2)O(2)-producing S. pyogenes but was ineffective against non-H(2)O(2)-producing E. faecalis. The MPO MICs and MBCs for E. coli, P. aeruginosa, and S. aureus were significantly lower than those for E. faecalis. The streptococcal studies showed much higher MIC/MBC results, but such testing required lysed horse blood-supplemented medium, thus preventing valid comparison of these results to those for the other microbes. E. faecalis MPO binding is reportedly weak compared to binding of E. coli, P. aeruginosa, and S. aureus but strong compared to binding of streptococci. Selective MPO binding results in selective killing.
髓过氧化物酶(MPO)据报道能选择性地结合细菌。本研究提供了 MPO 选择性结合的直接证据,并检验了选择性结合与选择性杀伤的关系。比较了 H2O2 和 OCl-的杀菌效果与 MPO 加 H2O2 的杀菌效果。通过将产 H2O2 的链球菌(结合 MPO 能力低)与高 MPO 结合的大肠杆菌、金黄色葡萄球菌或铜绿假单胞菌结合,在没有外源性 H2O2 的情况下,结合 MPO 和红细胞(红细胞[RBCs]),并结合和不结合 MPO 和 RBCs,研究了协同杀菌作用。MPO 杀菌作用的选择性通常通过 82 种细菌的 MPO MIC 和最小杀菌浓度(MBC)来测量,包括大肠杆菌、铜绿假单胞菌、金黄色葡萄球菌、粪肠球菌、化脓性链球菌、无乳链球菌和草绿色链球菌。H2O2 和 OCl-在亚抑菌浓度下即可破坏 RBCs。纳米摩尔浓度的 MPO 使 H2O2 的杀菌作用增加了 1000 倍。链球菌加 MPO 对所有测试的微生物产生了强大的协同杀菌作用,而 RBCs 仅在没有红细胞损伤的情况下稍微降低了效力。MPO 直接杀死产 H2O2 的化脓性链球菌,但对不产 H2O2 的粪肠球菌无效。大肠杆菌、铜绿假单胞菌和金黄色葡萄球菌的 MPO MIC 和 MBC 明显低于粪肠球菌。链球菌的研究结果显示 MIC/MBC 更高,但这种检测需要补充裂解马血的培养基,因此无法将这些结果与其他微生物的结果进行有效比较。与大肠杆菌、铜绿假单胞菌和金黄色葡萄球菌相比,粪肠球菌的 MPO 结合较弱,但与链球菌相比,结合较强。选择性 MPO 结合导致选择性杀伤。