Abstract

Swift recruitment of phagocytic leukocytes is critical to prevent infection when bacteria breach through the protective layers of the skin. According to canonical models, this occurs via an indirect process that is initiated by contact of bacteria with resident skin cells and which is independent of the pathogenic potential of the invader. Here, we describe a more rapid mechanism of leukocyte recruitment to the site of intrusion of the important skin pathogen Staphylococcus aureus that is based on direct recognition of specific bacterial toxins, the phenol-soluble modulins (PSMs), by circulating leukocytes. We used a combination of intravital imaging, ear infection and skin abscess models, and in-vitro gene expression studies to demonstrate that this early recruitment was dependent on the transcription factor EGR1 and significantly contributed to the prevention of infection. Our findings refine the classical notion of the non-specific and resident cell-dependent character of the innate immune response to bacterial infection by demonstrating a pathogen-specific high-alert mechanism involving direct recruitment of immune effector cells by secreted bacterial products.

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