AI Article Synopsis

  • NSTIs are severe bacterial infections caused by either multiple pathogens together or by Streptococcus pyogenes alone, with high mortality rates but unclear mechanisms of disease progression.
  • The study utilized dual RNA-Seq to analyze host-pathogen interactions from NSTI patient biopsies, revealing type-specific immune responses linked to either S. pyogenes or polymicrobial infections like those involving E. coli.
  • Key findings included various virulence factors and host genes associated with cytokine production, indicating distinct immune evasion strategies and responses that varied among different patient groups.

Article Abstract

Background: Necrotising soft tissue infections (NSTIs) are rapidly progressing bacterial infections usually caused by either several pathogens in unison (polymicrobial infections) or Streptococcus pyogenes (mono-microbial infection). These infections are rare and are associated with high mortality rates. However, the underlying pathogenic mechanisms in this heterogeneous group remain elusive.

Methods: In this study, we built interactomes at both the population and individual levels consisting of host-pathogen interactions inferred from dual RNA-Seq gene transcriptomic profiles of the biopsies from NSTI patients.

Results: NSTI type-specific responses in the host were uncovered. The S. pyogenes mono-microbial subnetwork was enriched with host genes annotated with involved in cytokine production and regulation of response to stress. The polymicrobial network consisted of several significant associations between different species (S. pyogenes, Porphyromonas asaccharolytica and Escherichia coli) and host genes. The host genes associated with S. pyogenes in this subnetwork were characterised by cellular response to cytokines. We further found several virulence factors including hyaluronan synthase, Sic1, Isp, SagF, SagG, ScfAB-operon, Fba and genes upstream and downstream of EndoS along with bacterial housekeeping genes interacting with the human stress and immune response in various subnetworks between host and pathogen.

Conclusions: At the population level, we found aetiology-dependent responses showing the potential modes of entry and immune evasion strategies employed by S. pyogenes, congruent with general cellular processes such as differentiation and proliferation. After stratifying the patients based on the subject-specific networks to study the patient-specific response, we observed different patient groups with different collagens, cytoskeleton and actin monomers in association with virulence factors, immunogenic proteins and housekeeping genes which we utilised to postulate differing modes of entry and immune evasion for different bacteria in relationship to the patients' phenotype.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9066942PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12916-022-02355-8DOI Listing

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