The bacterial siderophore enterobactin confers survival advantage to in macrophages Article (Faculty180)

cited authors

  • Saha, Piu; Xiao, Xia; Yeoh, Beng S; Chen, Qiuyan; Katkere, Bhuvana; Kirimanjeswara, Giri S; Vijay-Kumar, Matam

description

  • Enterobactin (Ent), a prototypical bacterial siderophore known for its unparalleled affinity for iron, is widely conserved among members of the family of Gram-negative bacteria. In this study, we demonstrated that, aside from mediating iron acquisition, Ent also dampened the macrophages (MΦs) antimicrobial responses against intracellular infection by serovar Typhimurium. Accordingly, the loss of Ent expression () in demoted their survivability against MΦs. Addition of exogenous Ent not only rescued the survival of , but also augmented WT to better withstand the microbicidal activity of MΦs. The protection conferred to WT was observed only when Ent was administered as iron-free, thus indicating the requirement of iron chelation in this context. In contrast, the exogenous iron-bound Ent retained its ability to promote the survival of , albeit modestly. Assessment on MΦs labile iron pool (LIP) revealed that iron-free Ent is able to permeate into MΦs, chelate the intracellular LIP, and regulate the expression of several key iron-regulatory proteins, ., divalent metal transporter 1, ferroportin, and hepcidin. Chelation of iron by Ent was also observed to promote the MΦs towards M2 polarization. Collectively, our findings demonstrated that Ent not only facilitates bacterial iron uptake but also disrupts MΦs iron homeostasis and M1/M2 polarization to safeguard intracellular bacteria against the anti-bacterial effects of their host.

authors

publication date

  • 2019

published in

start page

  • 412

end page

  • 423

volume

  • 10