AI Article Synopsis

  • Host-pathogen interactions are essential for understanding how microbes cause disease, particularly in the case of staphylococcal pore-forming cytotoxins, which can hijack immune molecules.
  • This study reveals the structures of the leukocidin GH (LukGH) cytotoxin in complex with its receptor, complement receptor 3 (CD11b-I), highlighting two binding interfaces and the differences between human and mouse responses.
  • Findings indicate that human CD11b-I triggers LukGH oligomerization and that effective cytotoxicity requires both binding to the receptor and receptor-induced oligomerization, paving the way for potential antitoxin strategies and better animal models for further research.

Article Abstract

Host-pathogen interactions are central to understanding microbial pathogenesis. The staphylococcal pore-forming cytotoxins hijack important immune molecules but little is known about the underlying molecular mechanisms of cytotoxin-receptor interaction and host specificity. Here we report the structures of a staphylococcal pore-forming cytotoxin, leukocidin GH (LukGH), in complex with its receptor (the α-I domain of complement receptor 3, CD11b-I), both for the human and murine homologs. We observe 2 binding interfaces, on the LukG and the LukH protomers, and show that human CD11b-I induces LukGH oligomerization in solution. LukGH binds murine CD11b-I weakly and is inactive toward murine neutrophils. Using a LukGH variant engineered to bind mouse CD11b-I, we demonstrate that cytolytic activity does not only require binding but also receptor-dependent oligomerization. Our studies provide an unprecedented insight into bicomponent leukocidin-host receptor interaction, enabling the development of antitoxin approaches and improved animal models to explore these approaches.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6955338PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1913690116DOI Listing

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