Emerging Role of the Interleukin-8 Cleaving Enzyme SpyCEP in Clinical Streptococcus pyogenes Infection

CE Turner, P Kurupati, MD Jones… - The Journal of …, 2009 - academic.oup.com
CE Turner, P Kurupati, MD Jones, RJ Edwards, S Sriskandan
The Journal of infectious diseases, 2009academic.oup.com
Abstract Neutrophil chemoattractant interleukin (IL)–8 is cleaved and inactivated by the
Streptococcus pyogenes cell envelope protease SpyCEP. A range of clinical S. pyogenes
strains of differing emm type demonstrated SpyCEP activity, although transcription of the
SpyCEP gene cepA differed 1000-fold between isolates. Disruption of the 2-component
regulatory system covR/S in pharyngeal isolates increased cepA transcription 100-fold; this
finding is consistent with endogenous CovR/S-mediated repression of cepA being …
Abstract
Neutrophil chemoattractant interleukin (IL)–8 is cleaved and inactivated by the Streptococcus pyogenes cell envelope protease SpyCEP. A range of clinical S. pyogenes strains of differing emm type demonstrated SpyCEP activity, although transcription of the SpyCEP gene cepA differed 1000-fold between isolates. Disruption of the 2-component regulatory system covR/S in pharyngeal isolates increased cepA transcription 100-fold; this finding is consistent with endogenous CovR/S-mediated repression of cepA being responsible for low SpyCEP expression in some S. pyogenes strains associated with pharyngitis. Among patients with invasive S. pyogenes infection, disease severity and outcome were associated with the SpyCEP activity of the isolate. Lethal invasive isolate H292 (emm81) expressed more cepA than did other tested isolates. This strain carried a unique covR mutation that impaired binding to the cepA promoter. CovR/S sequence comparison in other clinical isolates revealed community-wide dissemination of covS mutations but not covR mutations. The results highlight a potential hazard and underline the importance of continuing molecular epidemiological surveillance for community-wide dissemination of CovR/S mutant hyperinvasive strains
Oxford University Press