78 research outputs found

    A rare loss-of-function genetic mutation suggest a role of dermcidin deficiency in hidradenitis suppurativa pathogenesis

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    Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) is a chronic inflammatory skin disease with a multifactorial aetiology that involves a strict interplay between genetic factors, immune dysregulation and lifestyle. Familial forms represent around 40% of total HS cases and show an autosomal dominant mode of inheritance of the disease. In this study, we conducted a whole-exome sequence analysis on an Italian family of 4 members encompassing a vertical transmission of HS. Focusing on rare damaging variants, we identified a rare insertion of one nucleotide (c.225dupA:p.A76Sfs*21) in the DCD gene encoding for the antimicrobial peptide dermcidin (DCD) that was shared by the proband, his affected father and his 11-years old daughter. Since several transcriptome studies have shown a significantly decreased expression of DCD in HS skin, we hypothesised that the identified frameshift insertion was a loss-of-function mutation that might be associated with HS susceptibility in this family. We thus confirmed by mass spectrometry that DCD levels were diminished in the affected members and showed that the antimicrobial activity of a synthetic DCD peptide resulting from the frameshift mutation was impaired. In order to define the consequences related to a decrease in DCD activity, skin microbiome analyses of different body sites were performed by comparing DCD mutant and wild type samples, and results highlighted significant differences between the groins of mutated and wild type groups. Starting from genetic analysis conducted on an HS family, our findings showed, confirming previous transcriptome results, the potential role of the antimicrobial DCD peptide as an actor playing a crucial part in the etio-pathogenesis of HS and in the maintenance of the skin’s physiological microbiome composition; so, we can hypothesise that DCD could be used as a novel target for personalised therapeutic approach

    Highly Efficient Staphylococcus carnosus Mutant Selection System Based on Suicidal Bacteriocin Activation

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    Strains from various staphylococcal species produce bacteriocin peptides, which are thought to play important roles in bacterial competition and offer interesting biotechnological avenues. Many bacteriocins are secreted as inactive prepeptides with subsequent activation by specific proteolytic cleavage. By deletion of the protease gene gdmP in Staphylococcus gallinarum Tü3928, which produces the highly active lanthionine-containing bacteriocin gallidermin (lantibiotic), a strain was created producing inactive pregallidermin. On this basis, a new suicidal mutant selection system in the food-grade bacterium Staphylococcus carnosus was developed. Whereas pregallidermin was inactive against S. carnosus, it exerted potent bactericidal activity toward GdmP-secreting S. carnosus strains. To take advantage of this effect, gdmP was cloned in plasmid vectors used for random transposon mutagenesis or targeted allelic replacement of chromosomal genes. Both mutagenesis strategies rely on rare recombination events, and it has remained difficult and laborious to identify mutants among a vast majority of bacterial clones that still contain the delivery vectors. The gdmP-expressing plasmids pGS1 and pGS2 enabled very fast, easy, and reliable identification of transposon and gene replacement mutants, respectively. Mutant selection in the presence of pregallidermin caused suicidal inactivation of all clones that had retained the plasmids and allowed growth of only plasmid-cured mutants. Efficiency of mutant identification was several magnitudes higher than standard screening for the absence of plasmid-encoded antibiotic resistance markers and reached 100% specificity. Thus, the new pregallidermin-based mutant selection system represents a substantial improvement of staphylococcal mutagenesis methodology
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