AI Article Synopsis

  • MRSA is a significant health concern, recognized by the World Health Organization, creating an urgent need for new treatments.
  • Human group IIA-secreted phospholipase A2 (hGIIA) is highly effective against MRSA, and researchers found that a gene called lspA enables MRSA to resist hGIIA, making it a target for potential therapies.
  • By inhibiting LspA, researchers discovered that MRSA and other Gram-positive bacteria become more susceptible to hGIIA and the last-resort antibiotic daptomycin, suggesting that targeting LspA could improve treatment outcomes against these infections.

Article Abstract

Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) has been classified as a high priority pathogen by the World Health Organization underlining the high demand for new therapeutics to treat infections. Human group IIA-secreted phospholipase A2 (hGIIA) is among the most potent bactericidal proteins against Gram-positive bacteria, including S. aureus. To determine hGIIA-resistance mechanisms of MRSA, we screened the Nebraska Transposon Mutant Library using a sublethal concentration of recombinant hGIIA. We identified and confirmed the role of lspA, encoding the lipoprotein signal peptidase LspA, as a new hGIIA resistance gene in both in vitro assays and an infection model in hGIIA-transgenic mice. Increased susceptibility of the lspA mutant was associated with enhanced activity of hGIIA on the cell membrane. Moreover, lspA deletion increased susceptibility to daptomycin, a last-resort antibiotic to treat MRSA infections. MRSA wild type could be sensitized to hGIIA and daptomycin killing through exposure to LspA-specific inhibitors globomycin and myxovirescin A1. Analysis of >26,000 S. aureus genomes showed that LspA is highly sequence-conserved, suggesting universal application of LspA inhibition. The role of LspA in hGIIA resistance was not restricted to MRSA since Streptococcus mutans and Enterococcus faecalis were also more hGIIA-susceptible after lspA deletion or LspA inhibition, respectively. Overall, our data suggest that pharmacological interference with LspA may disarm Gram-positive pathogens, including MRSA, to enhance clearance by innate host defense molecules and clinically applied antibiotics.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10643906PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000527549DOI Listing

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