AI Article Synopsis

  • * The pathogen studied secretes a metallophore called staphylopine to help it acquire copper in zinc-limited environments, which leads to increased susceptibility to copper stress caused by the host's immune response during infection.
  • * This research highlights that while metallophores can aid bacteria, they can also be exploited by the host to induce metal toxicity and combat bacterial infections, revealing a potential weakness in various pathogens that produce similar metallophores.

Article Abstract

Unlabelled: Microorganisms can acquire metal ions in metal-limited environments using small molecules called metallophores. While metals and their importers are essential, metals can also be toxic, and metallophores have limited ability to discriminate metals. The impact of the metallophore-mediated non-cognate metal uptake on bacterial metal homeostasis and pathogenesis remains to be defined. The globally significant pathogen uses the Cnt system to secrete the metallophore staphylopine in zinc-limited host niches. Here, we show that staphylopine and the Cnt system facilitate bacterial copper uptake, potentiating the need for copper detoxification. During infection, staphylopine usage increased susceptibility to host-mediated copper stress, indicating that the innate immune response can harness the antimicrobial potential of altered elemental abundances in host niches. Collectively, these observations show that while the broad-spectrum metal-chelating properties of metallophores can be advantageous, the host can exploit these properties to drive metal intoxication and mediate antibacterial control.

Importance: During infection bacteria must overcome the dual threats of metal starvation and intoxication. This work reveals that the zinc-withholding response of the host sensitizes to copper intoxication. In response to zinc starvation utilizes the metallophore staphylopine. The current work revealed that the host can leverage the promiscuity of staphylopine to intoxicate during infection. Significantly, staphylopine-like metallophores are produced by a wide range of pathogens, suggesting that this is a conserved weakness that the host can leverage to toxify invaders with copper. Moreover, it challenges the assumption that the broad-spectrum metal binding of metallophores is inherently beneficial to bacteria.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10312489PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.05.30.542972DOI Listing

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