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RpiRc regulates RsbU to modulate eDNA-dependent biofilm formation and in vivo virulence of Staphylococcus aureus in a mouse model of catheter infection

Fischer, a.; Girard, M.; Laumay, F.; Woischnig, A.-K.; Khanna, N.; Francois, P.; Schrenzel, J.

2019-09-26 microbiology
10.1101/783985 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Staphylococcus aureus is a major human pathogen. Despite high incidence and morbidity, molecular mechanisms occurring during infection remain largely unknown. Under defined conditions, biofilm formation contributes to the severity of S. aureus related infections. Extracellular DNA (eDNA), a component of biofilm matrix released from apoptotic bacteria, is involved in biofilm structure and stability. In many bacterial biofilms, eDNA originates from cell lysis although eDNA can also be actively secreted or exported by bacterial membrane vesicles. By screening the Nebraska transposon library, we identified rpiRc as a biofilm regulator involved in eDNA regulation. RpiRc is a transcription factor from the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP) whose product is a polysaccharide intercellular adhesin (PIA) precursor. However, rpiRc mutant strain showed neither susceptibility to DispersinB(R) (a commercially available enzyme disrupting PIA biofilms) nor alteration of ica transcription (the operon regulating PIA production). Decreased biofilm formation was linked to Sln, an extracellular compound degrading eDNA in an autolysis independent pathway. Biofilm susceptibility to antibiotics in wt and mutant strains was tested using a similar protocol as the Calgary biofilm device. Involvement of RpiRc in S. aureus virulence was assessed ex vivo by internalization experiments into HEK293 cells and in vivo in a mouse model of subcutaneous catheter infection. While minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of planktonic cells were not affected in the mutant strain, we observed increased biofilm susceptibility to almost all tested antibiotics, regardless of their mode of action. More importantly, the rpiRc mutant showed reduced virulence in both ex vivo and in vivo experiments related to decreased fnbpA-B transcription and eDNA production. RpiRc is an important regulator involved in eDNA degradation inside the matrix of mature PIA independent biofilms. These results illustrate that RpiRc contributes to increased antibiotic tolerance in mature bacterial biofilm and also to S. aureus cell adhesion and virulence during subcutaneous infection.\n\nAuthor summaryBiofilm formation contributes to the severity of Staphylococcus aureus related infections. Biofilm matrix is mainly composed by polysaccharide intercellular adhesion (PIA), proteins and extracellular DNA (eDNA). By screening a mutant library of S. aureus, RpiRc was identified as a new regulator of eDNA dependent biofilm formation. How RpiRc regulates biofilm and its role in S. aureus virulence was studied in four different S. aureus strains. Deletion of RpiRc resulted in a pronounced decreased eDNA dependent biofilm formation, but not PIA dependent biofilm formation. Decreased biofilm formation was not related to increased autolysis, but was linked to extracellular compounds found in the supernatant of mutant biofilms. Sln was identified as one of this compound. RpiRc deletion also decreased biofilm recalcitrance (resistance) to selected antibiotics. Involvement of RpiRc in S. aureus pathogenesis was investigated ex vivo by internalization into HEK293 cells and in vivo in a mouse model of catheter infection. RpiRc deletion resulted in decreased virulence related to decreased expression of surface proteins like the fibronectin binding proteins A and B (FnbpA-B). These results illustrate that RpiRc contributes to increased antibiotic tolerance in mature bacterial biofilm and also to S. aureus cell adhesion and virulence during subcutaneous infection.

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