Enterococcal quorum-controlled protease alters phage infection.

FEMS Microbes

Department of Immunology and Microbiology, School of Medicine, University of Colorado - Anschutz Medical Campus, 12800 E. 19th Ave., Aurora, CO 80045, United States.

Published: July 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The rise of multidrug-resistant bacterial infections has led to renewed interest in bacteriophages as alternative antimicrobial treatments.
  • Research using proteomics on bacteria infected with phage VPE25 revealed the production of many unknown phage proteins and significant changes in bacterial protein levels, including a reduction in GelE, a protein linked to biofilm formation and virulence.
  • The study suggests that manipulating GelE production could enhance phage therapy effectiveness by reducing bacterial virulence and improving treatment outcomes against multidrug-resistant infections.

Article Abstract

Increased prevalence of multidrug-resistant bacterial infections has sparked interest in alternative antimicrobials, including bacteriophages (phages). Limited understanding of the phage infection process hampers our ability to utilize phages to their full therapeutic potential. To understand phage infection dynamics, we performed proteomics on infected with the phage VPE25. We discovered that numerous uncharacterized phage proteins are produced during phage infection of . Additionally, we identified hundreds of changes in bacterial protein abundances during infection. One such protein, enterococcal gelatinase (GelE), an quorum-sensing-regulated protease involved in biofilm formation and virulence, was reduced during VPE25 infection. Plaque assays showed that mutation of either the quorum-sensing regulator or resulted in plaques with a "halo" morphology and significantly larger diameters, suggesting decreased protection from phage infection. GelE-associated protection during phage infection is dependent on the putative murein hydrolase regulator LrgA and antiholin-like protein LrgB, whose expression have been shown to be regulated by GelE. Our work may be leveraged in the development of phage therapies that can modulate the production of GelE thereby altering biofilm formation and decreasing virulence.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11328733PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/femsmc/xtae022DOI Listing

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