Kasper Katherine J, Zeppa Joseph J, Wakabayashi Adrienne T, Xu Stacey X, Mazzuca Delfina M, Welch Ian, Baroja Miren L, Kotb Malak, Cairns Ewa, Cleary P Patrick, Haeryfar S M Mansour, McCormick John K
Department of Microbiology and Immunology and the Centre for Human Immunology, Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Animal Care and Veterinary Services, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada.
PLoS Pathog. 2014 May 29;10(5):e1004155. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1004155. eCollection 2014 May.
Establishing the genetic determinants of niche adaptation by microbial pathogens to specific hosts is important for the management and control of infectious disease. Streptococcus pyogenes is a globally prominent human-specific bacterial pathogen that secretes superantigens (SAgs) as 'trademark' virulence factors. SAgs function to force the activation of T lymphocytes through direct binding to lateral surfaces of T cell receptors and class II major histocompatibility complex (MHC-II) molecules. S. pyogenes invariably encodes multiple SAgs, often within putative mobile genetic elements, and although SAgs are documented virulence factors for diseases such as scarlet fever and the streptococcal toxic shock syndrome (STSS), how these exotoxins contribute to the fitness and evolution of S. pyogenes is unknown. Here we show that acute infection in the nasopharynx is dependent upon both bacterial SAgs and host MHC-II molecules. S. pyogenes was rapidly cleared from the nasal cavity of wild-type C57BL/6 (B6) mice, whereas infection was enhanced up to ∼10,000-fold in B6 mice that express human MHC-II. This phenotype required the SpeA superantigen, and vaccination with an MHC -II binding mutant toxoid of SpeA dramatically inhibited infection. Our findings indicate that streptococcal SAgs are critical for the establishment of nasopharyngeal infection, thus providing an explanation as to why S. pyogenes produces these potent toxins. This work also highlights that SAg redundancy exists to avoid host anti-SAg humoral immune responses and to potentially overcome host MHC-II polymorphisms.
确定微生物病原体对特定宿主的生态位适应性的遗传决定因素对于传染病的管理和控制至关重要。化脓性链球菌是一种全球范围内突出的人类特异性细菌病原体,它分泌超抗原(SAgs)作为“标志性”毒力因子。SAgs通过直接结合T细胞受体的侧面和II类主要组织相容性复合体(MHC-II)分子来促使T淋巴细胞激活。化脓性链球菌总是编码多种SAgs,通常位于假定的可移动遗传元件内,尽管SAgs是猩红热和链球菌中毒性休克综合征(STSS)等疾病的已记录毒力因子,但这些外毒素如何促进化脓性链球菌的适应性和进化尚不清楚。在这里,我们表明鼻咽部的急性感染依赖于细菌SAgs和宿主MHC-II分子。化脓性链球菌在野生型C57BL/6(B6)小鼠的鼻腔中迅速清除,而在表达人类MHC-II的B6小鼠中感染增强了约10000倍。这种表型需要SpeA超抗原,用SpeA的MHC-II结合突变类毒素进行疫苗接种可显著抑制感染。我们的研究结果表明,链球菌SAgs对于鼻咽部感染的建立至关重要,从而解释了为什么化脓性链球菌会产生这些强效毒素。这项工作还强调,SAgs的冗余存在是为了避免宿主抗SAgs体液免疫反应,并可能克服宿主MHC-II多态性。