Macrophages are critical to innate immunity due to their ability to phagocytose bacteria. The macrophage phagolysosome is a highly acidic organelle with potent antimicrobial properties, yet remarkably, ingested Staphylococcus aureus replicates within this niche. Herein we demonstrate that S. aureus requires the GraXRS regulatory system for growth within this niche, while the SaeRS and AgrAC two-component regulatory systems and the α-phenol soluble modulins are dispensable. Importantly, we find that it is exposure to acidic pH that is required for optimal growth of S. aureus inside fully acidified macrophage phagolysosomes. Exposure of S. aureus to acidic pH evokes GraS signaling, which in turn elicits an adaptive response that endows the bacteria with increased resistance to antimicrobial effectors, such as antimicrobial peptides, encountered inside macrophage phagolysosomes. Notably, pH-dependent induction of antimicrobial peptide resistance in S. aureus requires the GraS sensor kinase. GraS and MprF, a member of the GraS regulon, play an important role for bacterial survival in the acute stages of systemic infection, where in murine models of infection, S. aureus resides within liver-resident Kupffer cells. We conclude that GraXRS represents a vital regulatory system that functions to allow S. aureus to evade killing, prior to commencement of replication, within host antibacterial immune cells.
Although the GraS sensor kinase of Staphylococcus aureus is known for sensing of and resistance to cationic antimicrobial peptides (CAMPs), we recently established that it also signals in response to acidic pH which is encountered on human skin concurrently with CAMPs, antimicrobial unsaturated free fatty acids (uFFA), and calcium. We therefore evaluated how these environmental signals would affect GraS function and resistance to antimicrobial uFFA. Growth at pH 5.5 promoted increased resistance of S. aureus USA300 to linoleic- and arachidonic acid, but not palmitoleic or sapienic acid. However, enhanced resistance to these C16:1 uFFA was achieved by supplementing acidic medium with 0.5 mM calcium or subinhibitory CAMPs. Enhanced resistance to uFFA at acidic pH was dependent on GraS and GraS-dependent expression of the lysyl-phosphatidylglycerol synthase enzyme MprF, through a mechanism that did not require the lysyl-transferase function of MprF. In addition to enhanced resistance to antimicrobial uFFA, acidic pH also promoted increased production of secreted proteases in a GraS-dependent manner. During growth at pH 5.5, downstream phenotypes of signaling through GraS, including resistance to uFFA, MprF-dependent addition of positive charge to the cell surface, and increased production of secreted proteases all occurred independently of acidic amino acids in the extra-cytoplasmic sensor loop of GraS that were previously found to be required for sensing of CAMPs. Cumulatively, our data indicate that signaling through GraS at acidic pH occurs through a mechanism that is distinct from that described for CAMPs, leading to increased resistance to antimicrobial uFFA and production of secreted proteases. IMPORTANCE: Staphylococcus aureus asymptomatically colonizes 30% humans but is also a leading cause of infectious morbidity and mortality. Since infections are typically initiated by the same strain associated with asymptomatic colonization of the nose or skin, it is important to understand how the microbe can endure exposure to harsh conditions that successfully restrict the growth of other bacteria, including a combination of acidic pH, antimicrobial peptides and antimicrobial fatty acids. The significance of our research is in showing that acidic pH combined with antimicrobial peptide or environmental calcium can signal through a single membrane sensor protein to promote traits that may aid in survival, including modification of cell surface properties, increased resistance to antimicrobial fatty acids, and enhanced production of secreted proteases.
Divergent genes in Staphylococcus aureus USA300 encode the efflux pump FarE and TetR family regulator FarR, which confer resistance to antimicrobial unsaturated fatty acids. To study their regulation, we constructed USA300 ΔfarER, which exhibited a 2-fold reduction in MIC of linoleic acid. farE expressed from its native promoter on pLIfarE conferred increased resistance to USA300 but not USA300 ΔfarER. Complementation of USA300 ΔfarER with pLIfarR also had no effect, whereas resistance was restored with pLIfarER or through ectopic expression of farE. In electrophoretic mobility shift assays, FarR bound to three different oligonucleotide probes that each contained a TAGWTTA motif, occurring as (i) a singular motif overlapping the −10 element of the PfarR promoter, (ii) in palindrome PAL1 immediately in the 3′ direction of PfarR, or (iii) within PAL2 upstream of the predicted PfarE promoter. FarR autorepressed its expression through cooperative binding to PAL1 and the adjacent TAGWTTA motif in PfarR. Consistent with reports that S. aureus does not metabolize fatty acids through acyl coenzyme A (acyl-CoA) intermediates, DNA binding activity of FarR was not affected by linoleoyl-CoA. Conversely, induction of farE required fatty acid kinase FakA, which catalyzes the first metabolic step in the incorporation of unsaturated fatty acids into phospholipid. We conclude that FarR is needed to promote the expression of farE while strongly autorepressing its own expression, and our data are consistent with a model whereby FarR interacts with a FakA-dependent product of exogenous fatty acid metabolism to ensure that efflux only occurs when the metabolic capacity for incorporation of fatty acid into phospholipid is exceeded. IMPORTANCE Here, we describe the DNA binding and sensor specificity of FarR, a novel TetR family regulator (TFR) in Staphylococcus aureus. Unlike the majority of TFRs that have been characterized, which function to repress a divergently transcribed gene, we find that FarR is needed to promote expression of the divergently transcribed farE gene, encoding a resistance-nodulation-division (RND) family efflux pump that is induced in response to antimicrobial unsaturated fatty acids. Induction of farE was dependent on the function of the fatty acid kinase FakA, which catalyzes the first metabolic step in the incorporation of exogenous unsaturated fatty acids into phospholipid. This represents a novel example of TFR function.
In Staphylococcus aureus, genes that should confer the capacity to metabolize fatty acids by β‐oxidation occur in the fadXDEBA locus, but their function has not been elucidated. Previously, incorporation into phospholipid through the fatty acid kinase FakA pathway was thought to be the only option available for S. aureus to metabolize exogenous saturated fatty acids. We now find that in S. aureus USA300, a fadX::lux reporter was repressed by glucose and induced by palmitic acid but not stearic acid, while in USA300ΔfakA basal expression was significantly elevated, and enhanced in response to both fatty acids. When cultures were supplemented with palmitic acid, palmitoyl‐CoA representing the first metabolite in the β‐oxidation pathway was detected in USA300, but not in a fadXDEBA deletion mutant USA300Δfad, which relative to USA300 exhibited increased incorporation of palmitic acid into phospholipid accompanied by a rapid loss of viability. USA300Δfad also exhibited significantly reduced viability in a murine tissue abscess infection model. Our data are consistent with FakA‐mediated incorporation of fatty acids into phospholipid as a preferred pathway for metabolism of exogenous fatty acids, while the fad locus is critical for metabolism of palmitic acid, which is the most abundant free fatty acid in human plasma.
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