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In vivo evolution of a Klebsiella pneumoniae capsule defect promotes complement-mediated opsono-phagocytosis and persistence during recurrent infection

Authors :
Bain, William
Ahn, Brian
Penaloza, Hernan
McElheny, Christi
Tolman, Nathanial
van der Geest, Rick
Gonzalez-Ferrer, Shekina
Chen, Nathalie
An, Xiaojing
Hosuru, Ria
Tabary, Mohammadreza
Papke, Erin
Kohli, Naina
Farooq, Nauman
Bachman, William
Olonisakin, Tolani
Xiong, Zeyu
Griffith, Marissa P
Sullivan, Mara
Franks, Jonathan
Mustapha, Mustapha
Iovleva, Alina
Suber, Tomeka
Shanks, Robert MQ
Ferreira, Viviana
Stolz, Donna B
Van Tyne, Daria
Doi, Yohei
Lee, Janet
Source :
bioRxiv
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2023.

Abstract

Klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenemase-producing K. pneumoniae (KPC-Kp) bloodstream infections rarely overwhelm the host but are associated with high mortality. The complement system is a key host defense against bloodstream infection. However, there are varying reports of serum resistance among KPC-Kp isolates. We assessed growth of 59 KPC-Kp clinical isolates in human serum and found increased resistance in 16/59 (27%). We identified five genetically-related bloodstream isolates with varying serum resistance profiles collected from a single patient during an extended hospitalization marked by recurrent KPC-Kp bloodstream infections. We noted a loss-of-function mutation in the capsule biosynthesis gene, wcaJ, that emerged during infection was associated with decreased polysaccharide capsule content, and resistance to complement-mediated killing. Surprisingly, disruption of wcaJ increased deposition of complement proteins on the microbial surface compared to the wild-type strain and led to increased complement-mediated opsono-phagocytosis in human whole blood. Disabling opsono-phagocytosis in the airspaces of mice impaired in vivo control of the wcaJ loss-of-function mutant in an acute lung infection model. These findings describe the rise of a capsular mutation that promotes KPC-Kp persistence within the host by enabling co-existence of increased bloodstream fitness and reduced tissue virulence.

Subjects

Subjects :
Article

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
bioRxiv
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........4cfe24b0cd6b913e594d938bbb8a5014