Perinatal infection with Streptococcus agalactiae, or Group B Streptococcus (GBS), is associated with preterm birth, neonatal sepsis, and stillbirth. Here, we study the interactions of GBS with macrophages, essential sentinel immune cells that defend the gravid reproductive tract. Transcriptional analyses of GBS-macrophage co-cultures reveal enhanced expression of a gene encoding a putative metal resistance determinant, cadD. Deletion of cadD reduces GBS survival in macrophages, metal efflux, and resistance to metal toxicity. In a mouse model of ascending infection during pregnancy, the ΔcadD strain displays attenuated bacterial burden, inflammation, and cytokine production in gestational tissues. Furthermore, depletion of host macrophages alters cytokine expression and decreases GBS invasion in a cadD-dependent fashion. Our results indicate that GBS cadD plays an important role in metal detoxification, which promotes immune evasion and bacterial proliferation in the pregnant host.
Cryptococcus neoformans is a fungal pathogen that causes cryptococcal meningitis in immunocompromised individuals. Existing antifungal treatment plans have high mammalian toxicity and increasing drug resistance, demonstrating the dire need for new, nontoxic therapeutics. Antimicrobial peptoids are one alternative to combat this issue. Our lab has recently identified a tripeptoid, AEC5, with promising efficacy and selectivity against C. neoformans. Here, we report studies into the broad‐spectrum efficacy, killing kinetics, mechanism of action, in vivo half‐life, and subchronic toxicity of this compound. Most notably, these studies have demonstrated that AEC5 rapidly reduces fungal burden, killing all viable fungi within 3 hours. Additionally, AEC5 has an in vivo half‐life of 20+ hours and no observable in vivo toxicity following 28 days of daily injections. This research represents an important step in the characterization of AEC5 as a practical treatment option against C. neoformans infections.
Group B Streptococcus (GBS) is an encapsulated Gram-positive pathogen that causes ascending infections of the reproductive tract during pregnancy. The capsule of this organism is a critical virulence factor that has been implicated in a variety of cellular processes to promote pathogenesis. Primarily comprised of carbohydrates, the GBS capsule and its synthesis is driven by the capsule polysaccharide synthesis (cps) operon. The cpsE gene within this operon encodes a putative glycosyltransferase that is responsible for the transfer of a Glc-1-P from UDP-Glc to an undecaprenyl lipid molecule. We hypothesized that the cpsE gene product is important for GBS virulence and ascending infection during pregnancy. Our work demonstrates that a GBS cpsE mutant secretes fewer carbohydrates, has a reduced capsule, and forms less biofilm than the wild-type parental strain. We show that, compared to the parental strain, the ΔcpsE deletion mutant is more readily taken up by human placental macrophages and has a significantly attenuated ability to invade and proliferate in the mouse reproductive tract. Taken together, these results demonstrate that the cpsE gene product is an important virulence factor that aids in GBS colonization and invasion of the gravid reproductive tract.
Acinetobacter baumannii is an opportunistic
bacterial pathogen that causes severe infections in immunocompromised
patients. The emergence of multi- and pan-drug resistant strains of A. baumannii from clinical sources has confounded
treatment and enhanced morbidity and mortality associated with these
infections. One way that A. baumannii circumnavigates environmental and antimicrobial challenge is by
forming tertiary architectural structures of cells known as biofilms.
Biofilm-inhibiting molecules could be deployed as a potential chemotherapeutic
strategy to inhibit or disrupt A. baumannii biofilms and mitigate adverse outcomes due to infection. Lactoferrin
is an innate immune glycoprotein produced in high concentrations in
both human and bovine milk which has previously been shown to have
antibacterial and antibiofilm activities. We sought to test lactoferrin
against a bank of clinical isolates of A. baumannii to determine changes in bacterial growth or biofilm formation. Our
results indicate that human lactoferrin has slightly more potent antibacterial
activities than bovine lactoferrin against certain strains of A. baumannii and that these effects are associated
with anatomical site of isolation. Additionally, we have shown that
both bovine and human lactoferrin can inhibit A. baumannii biofilm formation and that these effects are associated with anatomical
site of isolation and whether the strain forms robust or weak biofilms.
This study sheds new light on the way that group B
Streptococcus
(GBS) defends itself against oxidative stress in the infected host. The enzyme encoded by the GBS gene
npx
is an NADH peroxidase that, our study reveals, provides defense against macrophage-derived reactive oxygen stress and facilitates infections of the uterus during pregnancy. This enzyme could represent a tractable target for future treatment strategies against invasive GBS infections.
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