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Publication : Interaction between Staphylococcus Agr virulence and neutrophils regulates pathogen expansion in the skin.

First Author  Matsumoto M Year  2021
Journal  Cell Host Microbe Volume  29
Issue  6 Pages  930-940.e4
PubMed ID  33852876 Mgi Jnum  J:321940
Mgi Id  MGI:6874669 Doi  10.1016/j.chom.2021.03.007
Citation  Matsumoto M, et al. (2021) Interaction between Staphylococcus Agr virulence and neutrophils regulates pathogen expansion in the skin. Cell Host Microbe 29(6):930-940.e4
abstractText  Staphylococcus aureus commonly infects the skin, but the host-pathogen interactions controlling bacterial growth remain unclear. S. aureus virulence is regulated by the Agr quorum-sensing system that controls factors including phenol-soluble modulins (PSMs), a group of cytotoxic peptides. We found a differential requirement for Agr and PSMalpha for pathogen growth in the skin. In neutrophil-deficient mice, S. aureus growth on the epidermis was unaffected, but the pathogen penetrated the dermis through mechanisms that require PSMalpha. In the dermis, pathogen expansion required Agr in wild-type mice, but not in neutrophil-deficient mice. Agr limited oxidative and non-oxidative killing in neutrophils by inhibiting pathogen late endosome localization and promoting phagosome escape. Unlike Agr, the SaeR/S virulence program was dispensable for growth in the epidermis and promoted dermal pathogen expansion independently of neutrophils. Thus, S. aureus growth and invasion are differentially regulated with Agr limiting intracellular killing within neutrophils to promote pathogen expansion in the dermis and subcutaneous tissue.
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