Publication:
Modulation of Haemophilus influenzae interaction with hydrophobic molecules by the VacJ/MlaA lipoprotein impacts strongly on its interplay with the airways

Consultable a partir de

Date

2018

Director

Publisher

Springer
Acceso abierto / Sarbide irekia
Artículo / Artikulua
Versión publicada / Argitaratu den bertsioa

Project identifier

MINECO//SAF2012-31166/ES/
MINECO//SAF2015-66520-R/ES/
MINECO//DPI2015-64221-C2-1-R/ES/

Abstract

Airway infection by nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHi) associates to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) exacerbation and asthma neutrophilic airway inflammation. Lipids are key inflammatory mediators in these disease conditions and consequently, NTHi may encounter free fatty acids during airway persistence. However, molecular information on the interplay NTHi-free fatty acids is limited, and we lack evidence on the importance of such interaction to infection. Maintenance of the outer membrane lipid asymmetry may play an essential role in NTHi barrier function and interaction with hydrophobic molecules. VacJ/MlaA-MlaBCDEF prevents phospholipid accumulation at the bacterial surface, being the only system involved in maintaining membrane asymmetry identified in NTHi. We assessed the relationship among the NTHi VacJ/MlaA outer membrane lipoprotein, bacterial and exogenous fatty acids, and respiratory infection. The vacJ/mlaA gene inactivation increased NTHi fatty acid and phospholipid global content and fatty acyl specific species, which in turn increased bacterial susceptibility to hydrophobic antimicrobials, decreased NTHi epithelial infection, and increased clearance during pulmonary infection in mice with both normal lung function and emphysema, maybe related to their shared lung fatty acid profiles. Altogether, we provide evidence for VacJ/MlaA as a key bacterial factor modulating NTHi survival at the human airway upon exposure to hydrophobic molecules.

Keywords

Bacterial pathogenesis, Infection

Department

IdAB. Instituto de Agrobiotecnología / Agrobioteknologiako Institutua

Faculty/School

Degree

Doctorate program

Editor version

Funding entities

A.F.C was funded by a contract from Ministerio Economía y Competitividad-MINECO, reference 20132RC947, Spain; I.R.A. is funded by a PhD studentship from Universidad Pública de Navarra, Spain; J.M. was funded by PhD studentship BES-2013-062644 from MINECO; S.M. is funded by a postdoctoral contract from CIBERES; L.C. was funded by a contract from MINECO, reference CS_NAV_IDAB_005, Spain; T.L.B. is the recipient of a PhD fellowship funded by the Department for Employment and Learning (Northern Ireland, UK). This work has been funded by grants from MINECO SAF2012-31166 and SAF2015-66520-R, from Health Department, Regional Govern from Navarra, Spain, reference 03/2016, and from SEPAR 31/2015 to J.G.; and by grant from MINECO DPI2015-64221 to COdS. CIBER is an initiative from Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII), Madrid, Spain.

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