Abstract

Streptococcus suis is a globally distributed zoonotic pathogen associated with meningitis and septicemia in humans, posing a serious threat to public health. To successfully invade and disseminate within its host, this bacterium must overcome the innate immune system. The antimicrobial peptide LL-37 impedes invading pathogens by directly perforating bacterial membranes and stimulating the immune function of neutrophils, which are the major effector cells against S. suis However, little is known about the biological relationship between S. suis and LL-37 and how this bacterium adapts to and evades LL-37-mediated immune responses. In this study by using an array of approaches, including enzyme, chemotaxis, cytokine assays, quantitative RT-PCR, and CD spectroscopy, we found that the cysteine protease ApdS from S. suis cleaves LL-37 and thereby plays a key role in the interaction between S. suis and human neutrophils. S. suis infection stimulated LL-37 production in human neutrophils, and S. suis exposure to LL-37 up-regulated ApdS protease expression in the bacterium. We observed that ApdS targets and rapidly cleaves LL-37, impairing its bactericidal activity against S. suis We attributed this effect to the decreased helical content of the secondary structure in the truncated peptide. Moreover, ApdS rescued S. suis from killing by human neutrophils and neutrophil extracellular traps because LL-37 truncation attenuated neutrophil chemotaxis and inhibited the formation of extracellular traps and the production of reactive oxygen species. Altogether, our findings reveal an immunosuppressive strategy of S. suis whereby the bacterium blunts the innate host defenses via ApdS protease-mediated LL-37 cleavage.

Highlights

  • Streptococcus suis is a globally distributed zoonotic pathogen associated with meningitis and septicemia in humans, posing a serious threat to public health

  • In this study by using an array of approaches, including enzyme, chemotaxis, cytokine assays, quantitative RT-PCR, and circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy, we found that the cysteine protease ApdS from S. suis cleaves LL-37 and thereby plays a key role in the interaction between S. suis and human neutrophils

  • To determine the role of the antimicrobial peptide LL-37 in the process of S. suis invasion, the LL-37 production in human neutrophils when exposed to S. suis wildtype (WT) strain 05ZYH33 was investigated using immunofluorescence microscopy with an antibody directed against LL-37

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Summary

ARTICLE cro

Fang Xie‡1, Yanan Zan‡1, Yueling Zhang‡, Ning Zheng§, Qiulong Yan¶, Wanjiang Zhang‡, Huihui Zhang‡, Mingjie Jin‡, Fuguang Chen‡, Xinyuan Zhang‡ʈ, and Siguo Liu‡2 From the ‡State Key Laboratory of Veterinary Biotechnology, Harbin Veterinary Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Harbin 150069, the ¶College of Basic Medical Science, §First Affiliated Hospital of Dalian Medical University, Dalian 116044, and the ʈCollege of Veterinary Medicine, Inner Mongolia Agricultural University, Huhehaote 010018, China

Edited by Chris Whitfield
Results
Discussion
Characteristics or sequence
This work This work
Bacterial strains and growth conditions
Cell and culture conditions
In vitro growth assays
Primers used in this study
Bioinformatics analysis
Protein expression and purification
Enzymatic assay
Construction of gene deletion mutant
Western blotting
SYTOX Green uptake assay
Circular dichroism spectroscopy
Phagocytes bactericidal assays
Dot blot
Lysosome formation analysis
Neutrophil chemotaxis assay
ROS production assay
Statistical analysis
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