Ibberson Carolyn B, Parlet Corey P, Kwiecinski Jakub, Crosby Heidi A, Meyerholz David K, Horswill Alexander R
Department of Microbiology, Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, USA.
Department of Pathology, Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, USA.
Infect Immun. 2016 May 24;84(6):1917-1929. doi: 10.1128/IAI.01418-15. Print 2016 Jun.
Staphylococcus aureus is a leading cause of chronic biofilm infections. Hyaluronic acid (HA) is a large glycosaminoglycan abundant in mammalian tissues that has been shown to enhance biofilm formation in multiple Gram-positive pathogens. We observed that HA accumulated in an S. aureus biofilm infection using a murine implant-associated infection model and that HA levels increased in a mutant strain lacking hyaluronidase (HysA). S. aureus secretes HysA in order to cleave HA during infection. Through in vitro biofilm studies with HA, the hysA mutant was found to accumulate increased biofilm biomass compared to the wild type, and confocal microscopy showed that HA is incorporated into the biofilm matrix. Exogenous addition of purified HysA enzyme dispersed HA-containing biofilms, while catalytically inactive enzyme had no impact. Additionally, induction of hysA expression prevented biofilm formation and also dispersed an established biofilm in the presence of HA. These observations were corroborated in the implant model, where there was decreased dissemination from an hysA mutant biofilm infection compared to the S. aureus wild type. Histopathology demonstrated that infection with an hysA mutant caused significantly reduced distribution of tissue inflammation compared to wild-type infection. To extend these studies, the impact of HA and S. aureus HysA on biofilm-like aggregates found in joint infections was examined. We found that HA contributes to the formation of synovial fluid aggregates, and HysA can disrupt aggregate formation. Taken together, these studies demonstrate that HA is a relevant component of the S. aureus biofilm matrix and HysA is important for dissemination from a biofilm infection.
金黄色葡萄球菌是慢性生物膜感染的主要病因。透明质酸(HA)是一种在哺乳动物组织中大量存在的大型糖胺聚糖,已被证明可增强多种革兰氏阳性病原体中的生物膜形成。我们使用小鼠植入相关感染模型观察到,在金黄色葡萄球菌生物膜感染中HA会积累,并且在缺乏透明质酸酶(HysA)的突变菌株中HA水平会升高。金黄色葡萄球菌在感染期间分泌HysA以裂解HA。通过对HA进行体外生物膜研究,发现与野生型相比,hysA突变体积累的生物膜生物量增加,共聚焦显微镜显示HA被整合到生物膜基质中。外源添加纯化的HysA酶可分散含HA的生物膜,而催化无活性的酶则没有影响。此外,hysA表达的诱导可防止生物膜形成,并且在有HA存在的情况下也可分散已形成的生物膜。这些观察结果在植入模型中得到了证实,与金黄色葡萄球菌野生型相比,hysA突变体生物膜感染的扩散减少。组织病理学表明,与野生型感染相比,hysA突变体感染导致组织炎症的分布显著减少。为了扩展这些研究,我们研究了HA和金黄色葡萄球菌HysA对关节感染中发现的生物膜样聚集体的影响。我们发现HA有助于滑液聚集体的形成,并且HysA可以破坏聚集体的形成。综上所述,这些研究表明HA是金黄色葡萄球菌生物膜基质的相关成分,而HysA对于生物膜感染的扩散很重要。