Abstract

ABSTRACTThe production of capsular polysaccharides by Klebsiella pneumoniae protects the bacterial cell from harmful environmental factors such as antimicrobial compounds and infection by bacteriophages (phages). To bypass this protective barrier, some phages encode polysaccharide-degrading enzymes referred to as depolymerases to provide access to cell surface receptors. Here, we characterized the phage RAD2, which infects K. pneumoniae strains that produce the widespread, hypervirulence-associated K2-type capsular polysaccharide. Using transposon-directed insertion sequencing, we have shown that the production of capsule is an absolute requirement for efficient RAD2 infection by serving as a first-stage receptor. We have identified the depolymerase responsible for recognition and degradation of the capsule, determined that the depolymerase forms globular appendages on the phage virion tail tip, and present the cryo-electron microscopy structure of the RAD2 capsule depolymerase at 2.7-Å resolution. A putative active site for the enzyme was identified, comprising clustered negatively charged residues that could facilitate the hydrolysis of target polysaccharides. Enzymatic assays coupled with mass spectrometric analyses of digested oligosaccharide products provided further mechanistic insight into the hydrolase activity of the enzyme, which, when incubated with K. pneumoniae, removes the capsule and sensitizes the cells to serum-induced killing. Overall, these findings expand our understanding of how phages target the Klebsiella capsule for infection, providing a framework for the use of depolymerases as antivirulence agents against this medically important pathogen.IMPORTANCE Klebsiella pneumoniae is a medically important pathogen that produces a thick protective capsule that is essential for pathogenicity. Phages are natural predators of bacteria, and many encode diverse “capsule depolymerases” which specifically degrade the capsule of their hosts, an exploitable trait for potential therapies. We have determined the first structure of a depolymerase that targets the clinically relevant K2 capsule and have identified its putative active site, providing hints to its mechanism of action. We also show that Klebsiella cells treated with a recombinant form of the depolymerase are stripped of capsule, inhibiting their ability to grow in the presence of serum, demonstrating the anti-infective potential of these robust and readily producible enzymes against encapsulated bacterial pathogens such as K. pneumoniae.

Highlights

  • The production of capsular polysaccharides by Klebsiella pneumoniae protects the bacterial cell from harmful environmental factors such as antimicrobial compounds and infection by bacteriophages

  • The thick capsular polysaccharide (CPS) layer of K. pneumoniae is essential for virulence and forms a protective barrier surrounding the bacterial cell against harmful environmental factors such as antimicrobial compounds, phagocytosis by host immune cells, and infection by phages [3]

  • Surface polysaccharides of K. pneumoniae, both LPS and CPS, are essential virulence factors that protect the bacterial cell from harmful environmental stimuli and show extensive complexity in their sugar compositions and linkages [3, 13, 14]

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Summary

Introduction

The production of capsular polysaccharides by Klebsiella pneumoniae protects the bacterial cell from harmful environmental factors such as antimicrobial compounds and infection by bacteriophages (phages). Bacteriophages (otherwise known as phages) are natural predators of bacteria, and phage therapy has long been considered a promising complementary strategy in combating antimicrobial-resistant (AMR) infections To infect their bacterial hosts, phages must first bind a specific receptor on the bacterial cell surface [9]. Phage can bind carbohydrate surface structures: the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in the outer leaflet of the outer membrane or the capsular polysaccharide (CPS) that is secreted out to form the outermost layer of the bacterial cell envelope [9] It is the specificity of the receptorRBP interaction that limits the host range of an individual phage to a particular bacterial strain or species. To breach this protective barrier, phages enzymatically degrade the polysaccharide with “depolymerase” proteins [16], which act on O-glycosidic bonds and function either as hydrolases or lyases [17]

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