iScience (Aug 2024)

Bacterial pore-forming toxin pneumolysin drives pathogenicity through host extracellular vesicles released during infection

  • Saba Parveen,
  • Chinmayi V. Bhat,
  • Aswathy C. Sagilkumar,
  • Shaheena Aziz,
  • J. Arya,
  • Asmita Dutta,
  • Somit Dutta,
  • Sautan Show,
  • Kuldeep Sharma,
  • Sumit Rakshit,
  • John Bernet Johnson,
  • Upendra Nongthomba,
  • Anirban Banerjee,
  • Karthik Subramanian

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 8
p. 110589

Abstract

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Summary: Streptococcus pneumoniae is a global priority respiratory pathogen that kills over a million people annually. The pore-forming cytotoxin, pneumolysin (PLY) is a major virulence factor. Here, we found that recombinant PLY as well as wild-type pneumococcal strains, but not the isogenic PLY mutant, upregulated the shedding of extracellular vesicles (EVs) harboring membrane-bound toxin from human THP-1 monocytes. PLY-EVs induced cytotoxicity and hemolysis dose-dependently upon internalization by recipient monocyte-derived dendritic cells. Proteomics analysis revealed that PLY-EVs are selectively enriched in key inflammatory host proteins such as IFI16, NLRC4, PTX3, and MMP9. EVs shed from PLY-challenged or infected cells induced dendritic cell maturation and primed them to infection. In vivo, zebrafish administered with PLY-EVs showed pericardial edema and mortality. Adoptive transfer of bronchoalveolar-lavage-derived EVs from infected mice to healthy recipients induced lung damage and inflammation in a PLY-dependent manner. Our findings identify that host EVs released during infection mediate pneumococcal pathogenesis.

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