11 results on '"Aura M. Ramirez"'
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2. The major role ofsarAin limitingStaphylococcus aureusextracellular protease production is correlated with decreased virulence in diverse clinical isolates in osteomyelitis
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Mara J. Campbell, Karen E. Beenken, Aura M. Ramirez, and Mark S. Smeltzer
- Abstract
We previously demonstrated that MgrA, SarA, SarR, SarS, SarZ, and Rot bind at least three of the four promoters associated with genes encoding primary extracellular proteases inStaphylococcus aureus. We also showed that mutation ofsarAresults in a greater increase in protease production, and decrease in biofilm formation, than mutation of the loci encoding any of these other proteins. However, these conclusions were based onin vitrostudies. Thus, the goal of the experiments reported here was to determine the relative impact of the regulatory loci encoding these proteinsin vivo. To this end, we compared the virulence ofmgrA, sarA, sarR, sarS, sarZ, androtmutants in a murine osteomyelitis model. Mutants were generated in the methicillin-resistant USA300 strain LAC and the methicillin-sensitive USA200 strain UAMS-1. As assessed based on an overall osteomyelitis pathology score derived from the incidence of bone fracture, bacterial burdens in the bone, cortical bone destruction, and reactive bone formation, mutation ofmgrAandrotlimited virulence to a statistically significant extent in UAMS-1, but not in LAC. In contrast, thesarAmutant exhibited reduced virulence in both strains. This illustrates the importance of considering diverse clinical isolates when evaluating the impact of regulatory mutations on virulence. The reduced virulence of thesarAmutant was correlated with reduced cytotoxicity for osteoblasts and osteoclasts, reduced biofilm formation, and reduced sensitivity to the antimicrobial peptide indolicidin, all of which were directly attributable to increased protease production in both LAC and UAMS-1. This suggests that thesein vitrophenotypes, either alone or in combination with each other, may be useful in prioritizing additional mutants forin vivoevaluation. Most importantly, they illustrate the significance of limiting protease productionin vivoin S.aureus, and confirm that SarA plays the primary role in this regard.Author SummaryStaphylococcus aureuscauses a diverse array of infections due to its ability to produce an arsenal of virulence factors. Among these are extracellular proteases, which serve several purposes on behalf of the bacterium. However, it has become increasingly apparent that it is also critical to limit the production of these proteases to prevent them from compromising theS. aureusvirulence factor repertoire. Many regulatory loci have been implicated in this respect, but it is difficult to draw relative conclusions because few reports have made direct comparisons, and fewer still have done soin vivo. We addressed this by assessing the impact on virulence of six regulatory loci previously implicated in protease production. We did this in the clinical context of osteomyelitis using mutants generated in two divergent clinical isolates. Our results confirm significant strain-dependent differences, reinforcing the importance of considering such diverse clinical isolates when evaluating targets for potential therapeutic intervention. In this respect, only mutation ofsarAattenuated virulence in both strains. This illustrates the importance of limiting protease production as a means of post-translational regulatory control inS. aureusand confirms thatsarAplays a predominant role in this regard.
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- 2022
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3. Exploiting Correlations between Protein Abundance and the Functional Status of saeRS and sarA To Identify Virulence Factors of Potential Importance in the Pathogenesis of Staphylococcus aureus Osteomyelitis
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Alan J. Tackett, Rick D. Edmondson, Charity L. Washam, Samuel G. Mackintosh, Mark S. Smeltzer, Aura M. Ramirez, Karen E. Beenken, Horace J. Spencer, and Stephanie D. Byrum
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Proteomics ,0301 basic medicine ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Virulence Factors ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030106 microbiology ,Virulence ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Article ,biofilm ,Microbiology ,Pathogenesis ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,Bacterial Proteins ,medicine ,Animals ,Protease ,Strain (chemistry) ,Osteomyelitis ,Biofilm ,osteomyelitis ,protease ,Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ,Staphylococcal Infections ,medicine.disease ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,Biofilms ,Mutation ,Trans-Activators ,Female ,Protein Kinases - Abstract
We used a murine model of postsurgical osteomyelitis (OM) to evaluate the relative virulence of the Staphylococcus aureus strain LAC and five isogenic variants that differ in the functional status of saeRS and sarA relative to each other. LAC and a variant in which saeRS activity is increased (saeC) were comparably virulent to each other, while ΔsaeRS, ΔsarA, ΔsaeRS/ΔsarA, and saeC/ΔsarA mutants were all attenuated to a comparable degree. Phenotypic comparisons including a mass-based proteomics approach that allowed us to assess the number and abundance of full-length proteins suggested that mutation of saeRS attenuates virulence in our OM model owing primarily to the decreased production of S. aureus virulence factors, while mutation of sarA does so owing to protease-mediated degradation of these same virulence factors. This was confirmed by demonstrating that eliminating protease production restored virulence to a greater extent in a LAC sarA mutant than in the isogenic saeRS mutant. Irrespective of the mechanism involved, mutation of saeRS or sarA was shown to result in reduced accumulation of virulence factors of potential importance. Thus, using our proteomics approach we correlated the abundance of specific proteins with virulence in these six strains and identified 14 proteins that were present in a significantly increased amount (log2 ≥ 5.0) in both virulent strains by comparison to all four attenuated strains. We examined biofilm formation and virulence in our OM model using a LAC mutant unable to produce one of these 14 proteins, specifically staphylocoagulase. The results confirmed that mutation of coa limits biofilm formation and, to a lesser extent, virulence in our OM model, although in both cases the limitation was reduced by comparison to the isogenic sarA mutant.
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- 2019
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4. Evaluation of a bone filler scaffold for local antibiotic delivery to prevent Staphylococcus aureus infection in a contaminated bone defect
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Alexandru S. Biris, Rebecca E. Rifkin, Aura M. Ramirez, Bailey Jackson, William King, Christopher Griffin, Daniel G. Meeker, Silke Hecht, Mara J. Campbell, Christopher M. Walker, Shawn E. Bourdo, David E. Anderson, Karen E. Beenken, Karrar Alghazali, and Mark S. Smeltzer
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0301 basic medicine ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Scaffold ,Bone Regeneration ,Science ,030106 microbiology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,Bone and Bones ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Drug Delivery Systems ,Osteogenesis ,Vancomycin ,Antibiotics ,medicine ,Animals ,Bone regeneration ,Multidisciplinary ,Decellularization ,Tissue Scaffolds ,Bacteria ,Antimicrobials ,Chemistry ,Osteomyelitis ,X-Ray Microtomography ,Staphylococcal Infections ,medicine.disease ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Disease Models, Animal ,Durapatite ,030104 developmental biology ,Medicine ,Infectious diseases ,Gentamicin ,Rabbits ,Gentamicins ,Bacterial infection ,Pathogens ,Daptomycin ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We previously reported the development of an osteogenic bone filler scaffold consisting of degradable polyurethane, hydroxyapatite, and decellularized bovine bone particles. The current study was aimed at evaluating the use of this scaffold as a means of local antibiotic delivery to prevent infection in a bone defect contaminated with Staphylococcus aureus. We evaluated two scaffold formulations with the same component ratios but differing overall porosity and surface area. Studies with vancomycin, daptomycin, and gentamicin confirmed that antibiotic uptake was concentration dependent and that increased porosity correlated with increased uptake and prolonged antibiotic release. We also demonstrate that vancomycin can be passively loaded into either formulation in sufficient concentration to prevent infection in a rabbit model of a contaminated segmental bone defect. Moreover, even in those few cases in which complete eradication was not achieved, the number of viable bacteria in the bone was significantly reduced by treatment and there was no radiographic evidence of osteomyelitis. Radiographs and microcomputed tomography (µCT) analysis from the in vivo studies also suggested that the addition of vancomycin did not have any significant effect on the scaffold itself. These results demonstrate the potential utility of our bone regeneration scaffold for local antibiotic delivery to prevent infection in contaminated bone defects.
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- 2021
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5. The Increased Accumulation of Staphylococcus aureus Virulence Factors Is Maximized in a purR Mutant by the Increased Production of SarA and Decreased Production of Extracellular Proteases
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Aura M. Ramirez, Duah Alkam, Piroon Jenjaroenpun, Mark S. Smeltzer, Karen E. Beenken, and Horace J. Spencer
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Purr ,Mutation ,Proteases ,Protease ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunology ,Mutant ,Biofilm ,Virulence ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,Infectious Diseases ,Staphylococcus aureus ,medicine ,Parasitology - Abstract
Mutation of purR was previously shown to enhance the virulence of Staphylococcus aureus in a murine sepsis model, and this cannot be fully explained by increased expression of genes within the purine biosynthesis pathway. Rather, the increased production of specific S. aureus virulence factors, including alpha toxin and the fibronectin-binding proteins, was shown to play an important role. Mutation of purR was also shown previously to result in increased abundance of SarA. Here, we demonstrate by transposon sequencing that mutation of purR in the USA300 strain LAC increases fitness in a biofilm while mutation of sarA has the opposite effect. Therefore, we assessed the impact of sarA on reported purR-associated phenotypes by characterizing isogenic purR, sarA, and sarA/purR mutants. The results confirmed that mutation of purR results in increased abundance of alpha toxin, protein A, the fibronectin-binding proteins, and SarA, decreased production of extracellular proteases, an increased capacity to form a biofilm, and increased virulence in an osteomyelitis model. Mutation of sarA had the opposite effects on all of these phenotypes and, other than bacterial burdens in the bone, all of the phenotypes of sarA/purR mutants were comparable to those of sarA mutants. Limiting the production of extracellular proteases reversed all of the phenotypes of sarA mutants and most of those of sarA/purR mutants. We conclude that a critical component defining the virulence of a purR mutant is the enhanced production of SarA, which limits protease production to an extent that promotes the accumulation of critical S. aureus virulence factors.
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- 2021
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6. Limiting protease production plays a key role in the pathogenesis of the divergent clinical isolates of
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Joseph S, Rom, Karen E, Beenken, Aura M, Ramirez, Christopher M, Walker, Ethan J, Echols, and Mark S, Smeltzer
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Staphylococcus aureus ,UAMS-1 ,rot ,biofilm ,sepsis ,Bacterial Proteins ,Animals ,Humans ,sigB ,sarA ,Virulence ,protease ,Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ,codY ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,Staphylococcal Infections ,USA200 ,Disease Models, Animal ,Phenotype ,Biofilms ,Mutation ,bacteria ,Female ,Peptide Hydrolases ,Research Article ,Research Paper - Abstract
Using the USA300, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus strain LAC, we previously examined the impact of regulatory mutations implicated in biofilm formation on protease production and virulence in a murine sepsis model. Here we examined the impact of these mutations in the USA200, methicillin-sensitive strain UAMS-1. Mutation of agr, mgrA, rot, sarA and sigB attenuated the virulence of UAMS-1. A common characteristic of codY, rot, sigB, and sarA mutants was increased protease production, with mutation of rot having the least impact followed by mutation of codY, sigB and sarA, respectively. Protein A was undetectable in conditioned medium from all four mutants, while extracellular nuclease was only present in the proteolytically cleaved NucA form. The abundance of high molecular weight proteins was reduced in all four mutants. Biofilm formation was reduced in codY, sarA and sigB mutants, but not in the rot mutant. Eliminating protease production partially reversed these phenotypes and enhanced biofilm formation. This was also true in LAC codY, rot, sarA and sigB mutants. Eliminating protease production enhanced the virulence of LAC and UAMS-1 sarA, sigB and rot mutants in a murine sepsis model but did not significantly impact the virulence of the codY mutant in either strain. Nevertheless, these results demonstrate that repressing protease production plays an important role in defining critical phenotypes in diverse clinical isolates of S. aureus and that Rot, SigB and SarA play critical roles in this regard.
- Published
- 2021
7. Evaluation of a polymeric composite bone filler scaffold for local antibiotic delivery to prevent Staphylococcus aureus infection in a contaminated bone defect
- Author
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Shawn E. Bourdo, Bailey Jackson, Christopher Griffin, Karen E. Beenken, Mark S. Smeltzer, Rebecca E. Rifkin, Aura M. Ramirez, Alexandru S. Biris, Silke Hecht, William King, Daniel G. Meeker, David E. Anderson, Karrar Alghazali, Mara J. Campbell, and Christopher M. Walker
- Subjects
Scaffold ,Decellularization ,medicine.drug_class ,Chemistry ,Osteomyelitis ,Antibiotics ,medicine.disease_cause ,medicine.disease ,Staphylococcus aureus ,medicine ,Vancomycin ,Gentamicin ,Bone regeneration ,Biomedical engineering ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We previously reported the development of an osteogenic bone filler scaffold consisting of degradable polyurethane (dPU), nano-sized hydroxyapatite (nHA), and decellularized bovine bone particles (DBP). In this report we describe the results of studies aimed at evaluating the use of this scaffold as a means of local antibiotic delivery for the prevention of infection in a segmental bone defect contaminated with Staphylococcus aureus. We evaluated two different scaffold formulations that contained the same components in the same ratios but differed from each other with respect to overall porosity and therefore surface area. Studies done with vancomycin, daptomycin, and gentamicin confirmed that antibiotic uptake was concentration dependent and that increased porosity was correlated with increased uptake and prolonged release of all three antibiotics. Vancomycin could be passively loaded into either scaffold formulation in an amount sufficient to prevent infection, as evidenced by the complete eradication of viable bacteria from the surgical site of most animals in a rabbit model of a contaminated mid-radial segmental bone defect. Even in those few cases in which complete eradication was not achieved, the number of viable bacteria present in the bone was significantly reduced comparison to untreated controls. There was also no radiographic evidence of osteomyelitis in any rabbit treated with vancomycin-loaded scaffold. Microcomputed tomography (μCT) of bone defects up to 84 days of exposure to scaffolds with and without vancomycin also demonstrated that the addition of vancomycin even in the highest concentration did not significantly diminish the osteogenic properties of either scaffold formulation. Together, these results demonstrate the potential utility of our bone regeneration scaffold for local antibiotic delivery.
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- 2020
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8. The Increased Accumulation of Staphylococcus aureus Virulence Factors Is Maximized in a
- Author
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Duah, Alkam, Piroon, Jenjaroenpun, Aura M, Ramirez, Karen E, Beenken, Horace J, Spencer, and Mark S, Smeltzer
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Staphylococcus aureus ,Virulence ,Virulence Factors ,Osteomyelitis ,Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ,Staphylococcal Infections ,Molecular Pathogenesis ,Repressor Proteins ,Mice ,Bacterial Proteins ,Biofilms ,Endopeptidases ,Mutation ,DNA Transposable Elements ,Trans-Activators ,Animals ,Disease Susceptibility ,Extracellular Space - Abstract
Mutation of purR was previously shown to enhance the virulence of Staphylococcus aureus in a murine sepsis model, and this cannot be fully explained by increased expression of genes within the purine biosynthesis pathway. Rather, the increased production of specific S. aureus virulence factors, including alpha toxin and the fibronectin-binding proteins, was shown to play an important role. Mutation of purR was also shown previously to result in increased abundance of SarA. Here, we demonstrate by transposon sequencing that mutation of purR in the USA300 strain LAC increases fitness in a biofilm while mutation of sarA has the opposite effect. Therefore, we assessed the impact of sarA on reported purR-associated phenotypes by characterizing isogenic purR, sarA, and sarA/purR mutants. The results confirmed that mutation of purR results in increased abundance of alpha toxin, protein A, the fibronectin-binding proteins, and SarA, decreased production of extracellular proteases, an increased capacity to form a biofilm, and increased virulence in an osteomyelitis model. Mutation of sarA had the opposite effects on all of these phenotypes and, other than bacterial burdens in the bone, all of the phenotypes of sarA/purR mutants were comparable to those of sarA mutants. Limiting the production of extracellular proteases reversed all of the phenotypes of sarA mutants and most of those of sarA/purR mutants. We conclude that a critical component defining the virulence of a purR mutant is the enhanced production of SarA, which limits protease production to an extent that promotes the accumulation of critical S. aureus virulence factors.
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- 2020
9. The Impacts of msaABCR on sarA -Associated Phenotypes Are Different in Divergent Clinical Isolates of Staphylococcus aureus
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Aura M. Ramirez, Mark S. Smeltzer, Gyan S. Sahukhal, Joseph S. Rom, Karen E. Beenken, and Mohamed O. Elasri
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0303 health sciences ,Proteases ,Mutation ,030306 microbiology ,Operon ,Immunology ,Mutant ,Biofilm ,Virulence ,Context (language use) ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Infectious Diseases ,Staphylococcus aureus ,medicine ,Parasitology ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
The staphylococcal accessory regulator (sarA) plays an important role in Staphylococcus aureus infections, including osteomyelitis, and the msaABCR operon has been implicated as an important factor in modulating expression of sarA Thus, we investigated the contribution of msaABCR to sarA-associated phenotypes in the S. aureus clinical isolates LAC and UAMS-1. Mutation of msaABCR resulted in reduced production of SarA and a reduced capacity to form a biofilm in both strains. Biofilm formation was enhanced in a LAC msa mutant by restoring the production of SarA, but this was not true in a UAMS-1 msa mutant. Similarly, extracellular protease production was increased in a LAC msa mutant but not a UAMS-1 msa mutant. This difference was reflected in the accumulation and distribution of secreted virulence factors and in the impact of extracellular proteases on biofilm formation in a LAC msa mutant. Most importantly, it was reflected in the relative impact of mutating msa as assessed in a murine osteomyelitis model, which had a significant impact in LAC but not in UAMS-1. In contrast, mutation of sarA had a greater impact on all of these in vitro and in vivo phenotypes than mutation of msaABCR, and it did so in both LAC and UAMS-1. These results suggest that, at least in osteomyelitis, it would be therapeutically preferable to target sarA rather than msaABCR to achieve the desired clinical result, particularly in the context of divergent clinical isolates of S. aureus.
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- 2020
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10. SarA plays a predominant role in controlling the production of extracellular proteases in the diverse clinical isolates of Staphylococcus aureus LAC and UAMS-1
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Aura M. Ramirez, Karen E. Beenken, Alan J. Tackett, Mark S. Smeltzer, Brittney D. Gimza, Stephanie D. Byrum, and Lindsey N. Shaw
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medicine.medical_treatment ,Mutant ,Osteoclasts ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,medicine.disease_cause ,biofilm ,0303 health sciences ,Virulence ,Metalloendopeptidases ,regulation ,Staphylococcal Infections ,extracellular protease ,Phenotype ,Infectious Diseases ,Staphylococcus aureus ,mgrA ,Research Article ,Research Paper ,Microbiology (medical) ,Proteases ,Virulence Factors ,Bacterial Toxins ,Immunology ,rot ,Biology ,Microbiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Bacterial Proteins ,medicine ,Humans ,Aureolysin ,Gene ,030304 developmental biology ,sarA ,Osteoblasts ,Protease ,030306 microbiology ,Biofilm ,Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ,sarR ,Biofilms ,Mutation ,Trans-Activators ,sarZ ,Parasitology ,sarS ,Peptide Hydrolases - Abstract
Using DNA affinity chromatography we demonstrate that the S. aureus regulatory proteins MgrA, Rot, SarA, and SarS bind DNA baits derived from the promoter regions associated with the genes encoding aureolysin, ScpAB, SspABC, and SplA-F. Three of four baits also bound SarR and SarZ, the exception in both cases being the ScpAB-associated bait. Using the USA300, methicillin-resistant strain LAC and the USA200, methicillin-sensitive strain UAMS-1, we generated mutations in the genes encoding each of these proteins alone and in combination with sarA and examined the impact on protease production, the accumulation of high molecular weight proteins, and biofilm formation. These studies confirmed that multiple regulatory loci are involved in limiting protease production to a degree that impacts all of these phenotypes, but also demonstrate that sarA plays a predominant role in this regard. Using sarA mutants unable to produce individual proteases alone and in combination with each other, we also demonstrate that the increased production of aureolysin and ScpA is particularly important in defining the biofilm-deficient phenotype of LAC and UAMS-1 sarA mutants, while aureolysin alone plays a key role in defining the reduced accumulation of alpha toxin and overall cytotoxicity as assessed using both osteoblasts and osteoclasts.
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- 2020
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11. The Impacts of
- Author
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Joseph S, Rom, Aura M, Ramirez, Karen E, Beenken, Gyan S, Sahukhal, Mohamed O, Elasri, and Mark S, Smeltzer
- Subjects
Staphylococcus aureus ,LAC ,sarA ,Genotype ,Virulence Factors ,UAMS-1 ,osteomyelitis ,Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ,Bacterial Infections ,Staphylococcal Infections ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Disease Models, Animal ,Phenotype ,Bacterial Proteins ,Biofilms ,Mutation ,msa ,Animals ,global regulatory networks ,proteases ,nucleases - Abstract
The staphylococcal accessory regulator (sarA) plays an important role in Staphylococcus aureus infections, including osteomyelitis, and the msaABCR operon has been implicated as an important factor in modulating expression of sarA. Thus, we investigated the contribution of msaABCR to sarA-associated phenotypes in the S. aureus clinical isolates LAC and UAMS-1. Mutation of msaABCR resulted in reduced production of SarA and a reduced capacity to form a biofilm in both strains., The staphylococcal accessory regulator (sarA) plays an important role in Staphylococcus aureus infections, including osteomyelitis, and the msaABCR operon has been implicated as an important factor in modulating expression of sarA. Thus, we investigated the contribution of msaABCR to sarA-associated phenotypes in the S. aureus clinical isolates LAC and UAMS-1. Mutation of msaABCR resulted in reduced production of SarA and a reduced capacity to form a biofilm in both strains. Biofilm formation was enhanced in a LAC msa mutant by restoring the production of SarA, but this was not true in a UAMS-1 msa mutant. Similarly, extracellular protease production was increased in a LAC msa mutant but not a UAMS-1 msa mutant. This difference was reflected in the accumulation and distribution of secreted virulence factors and in the impact of extracellular proteases on biofilm formation in a LAC msa mutant. Most importantly, it was reflected in the relative impact of mutating msa as assessed in a murine osteomyelitis model, which had a significant impact in LAC but not in UAMS-1. In contrast, mutation of sarA had a greater impact on all of these in vitro and in vivo phenotypes than mutation of msaABCR, and it did so in both LAC and UAMS-1. These results suggest that, at least in osteomyelitis, it would be therapeutically preferable to target sarA rather than msaABCR to achieve the desired clinical result, particularly in the context of divergent clinical isolates of S. aureus.
- Published
- 2019
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