Degradation of fibrinogen and collagen by staphopains, cysteine proteases released from Staphylococcus aureus

Staphylococcus aureus is the most frequently isolated pathogen in gram-positive sepsis often complicated by a blood clotting disorder, and is the leading cause of infective endocarditis induced by bacterial destruction of endocardial tissues. The bacterium secretes cysteine proteases referred to as...

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Veröffentlicht in:Microbiology (Society for General Microbiology) 2011-03, Vol.157 (Pt 3), p.786-792
Hauptverfasser: OHBAYASHI, Takehisa, IRIE, Atsushi, MURAKAMI, Yoji, NOWAK, Magdalena, POTEMPA, Jan, NISHIMURA, Yasuharu, SHINOHARA, Masanori, IMAMURA, Takahisa
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Staphylococcus aureus is the most frequently isolated pathogen in gram-positive sepsis often complicated by a blood clotting disorder, and is the leading cause of infective endocarditis induced by bacterial destruction of endocardial tissues. The bacterium secretes cysteine proteases referred to as staphopain A (ScpA) and staphopain B (SspB). To investigate virulence activities of staphopains pertinent to clotting disorders and tissue destruction, we examined their effects on collagen, one of the major tissue components, and on plasma clotting. Both staphopains prolonged the partial thromboplastin time of plasma in a dose- and activity-dependent manner, with SspB being threefold more potent than ScpA. Staphopains also prolonged the thrombin time of both plasma and fibrinogen, indicating that these enzymes can cause impaired plasma clotting through fibrinogen degradation. Whereas SspB cleaved the fibrinogen Aα-chain at the C-terminal region very efficiently, ScpA degraded it rather slowly. This explains the superior ability of the former enzyme to impair fibrinogen clottability. Enzymically active staphopains, at concentrations as low as 10 nM, degraded collagen with comparable efficiency. These results show novel virulence activities of staphopains in degrading fibrinogen and collagen, and suggest an involvement of staphopains in the clotting impairment and tissue destruction caused by staphylococcal infection.
ISSN:1350-0872
1465-2080
DOI:10.1099/mic.0.044503-0