Abstract

SummaryExcess copper is highly toxic and forms part of the host innate immune system's antibacterial arsenal, accumulating at sites of infection and acting within macrophages to kill engulfed pathogens. We show for the first time that a novel, horizontally gene transferred copper resistance locus (copXL), uniquely associated with the SCCmec elements of the highly virulent, epidemic, community acquired methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA‐MRSA) USA300, confers copper hyper‐resistance. These genes are additional to existing core genome copper resistance mechanisms, and are not found in typical S. aureus lineages, but are increasingly identified in emerging pathogenic isolates. Our data show that CopX, a putative P1B‐3‐ATPase efflux transporter, and CopL, a novel lipoprotein, confer copper hyper‐resistance compared to typical S. aureus strains. The copXL genes form an operon that is tightly repressed in low copper environments by the copper regulator CsoR. Significantly, CopX and CopL are important for S. aureus USA300 intracellular survival within macrophages. Therefore, the emergence of new S. aureus clones with the copXL locus has significant implications for public health because these genes confer increased resistance to antibacterial copper toxicity, enhancing bacterial fitness by altering S. aureus interaction with innate immunity.

Highlights

  • New methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) clones are emerging and circulating worldwide presenting a new threat to human health

  • Our data show that CopX, a putative P1B-3ATPase efflux transporter, and CopL, a novel lipoprotein, confer copper hyper-resistance compared to typical S. aureus strains

  • CopX and CopL are important for S. aureus USA300 intracellular survival within macrophages

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Summary

Introduction

New methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) clones are emerging and circulating worldwide presenting a new threat to human health. S. aureus is an opportunistic pathogen responsible for a range of minor and life-threatening diseases (Sullivan et al, 1984; Tong et al, 2015) and is considered by the World Health Organisation to be one of the major multidrug resistant bacterial health threats globally (WHO, 2017). Hospital-associated (HA) MRSA are a leading cause of nosocomial infections worldwide, predominantly infecting patients with reduced immune function. CA-MRSA mainly causes severe skin and soft tissue infections (SSTI; Johnson et al, 2007) but can cause invasive life-threatening infections, for example necrotizing pneumonia (Francis et al, 2005)

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