New Insights Into The Role Of Zinc Acquisition And Zinc Tolerance In Group A Streptococcal Infection

INFECTION AND IMMUNITY(2018)

Cited 37|Views11
No score
Abstract
Zinc plays an important role in host innate immune function. However, the innate immune system also utilizes zinc starvation ("nutritional immunity") to combat infections. Here, we investigate the role of zinc import and export in the protection of Streptococcus pyogenes (group A Streptococcus; GAS), a Gram-positive bacterial pathogen responsible for a wide spectrum of human diseases, against challenge from host innate immune defense. In order to determine the role of GAS zinc import and export during infection, we utilized zinc import (Delta adcA Delta adcAII) and export (Delta czcD) deletion mutants in competition with the wild type in both in vitro and in vivo virulence models. We demonstrate that nutritional immunity is deployed extracellularly, while zinc toxicity is utilized upon phagocytosis of GAS by neutrophils. We also show that lysosomes and azurophilic granules in neutrophils contain zinc stores for use against intracellular pathogens.
More
Translated text
Key words
zinc acquisition, zinc toxicity, nutritional immunity, group A Streptococcus, Streptococcus pyogenes, neutrophils
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined