1 research outputs found
Staphylococcus aureus Panton‐Valentine Leukocidin triggers an alternative NETosis process targeting mitochondria
Panton-Valentine Leukocidin (PVL) is a bicomponent leukotoxin produced by
3%-10% of clinical Staphylococcus aureus (SA) strains involved in the severity of
hospital and community-acquired infections. Although PVL was long known as a
pore-forming toxin, recent studies have challenged the formation of a pore at the
plasma membrane, while its endocytosis and the exact mode of action remain to
be defined. In vitro immunolabeling of human neutrophils shows that Neutrophil
Extracellular Traps (NETosis) is triggered by the action of purified PVL, but not by
Gamma hemolysin CB (HlgCB), a structurally similar SA leukotoxin. PVL causes
the ejection of chromatin fibers (NETs) decorated with antibacterial peptides independently
of the NADPH oxidase oxidative burst. Leukotoxin partially colocalizes
with mitochondria and enhances the production of reactive oxygen species from
these organelles, while showing an increased autophagy, which results unnecessary
for NETs ejection. PVL NETosis is elicited through Ca2+-activated SK channels and
Myeloperoxidase activity but is abolished by Allopurinol pretreatment of neutrophils.
Moreover, massive citrullination of the histone H3 is performed by peptidyl
arginine deiminases. Inhibition of this latter enzymes fails to abolish NET extrusion.
Unexpectedly, PVL NETosis does not seem to involve Src kinases, which is the main
kinase family activated downstream the binding of PVL F subunit to CD45 receptor,
while the specific kinase pathway differs from the NADPH oxidase-dependent
NETosis. PVL alone causes a different and specific form of NETosis that may rather
represent a bacterial strategy conceived to disarm and disrupt the immune response,
eventually allowing SA to spread