TY - JOUR
T1 - Nira is an alternative nitrite reductase from pseudomonas aeruginosa with potential as an antivirulence target
AU - Fenn, Samuel
AU - Dubern, Jean Frédéric
AU - Cigana, Cristina
AU - De Simone, Maura
AU - Lazenby, James
AU - Juhas, Mario
AU - Schwager, Stephan
AU - Bianconi, Irene
AU - Döring, Gerd
AU - Elmsley, Jonas
AU - Eberl, Leo
AU - Williams, Paul
AU - Bragonzi, Alessandra
AU - Cámara, Miguel
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Fenn et al.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - The opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa produces an arsenal of virulence factors causing a wide range of diseases in multiple hosts and is difficult to eradicate due to its intrinsic resistance to antibiotics. With the antibacterial pipeline drying up, antivirulence therapy has become an attractive alternative strategy to the traditional use of antibiotics to treat P. aeruginosa infections. To identify P. aeruginosa genes required for virulence in multiple hosts, a random library of Tn5 mutants in strain PAO1-L was previously screened in vitro for those showing pleiotropic effects in the production of virulence phenotypes. Using this strategy, we identified a Tn5 mutant with an insertion in PA4130 showing reduced levels of a number of virulence traits in vitro. Construction of an isogenic mutant in this gene presented results similar to those for the Tn5 mutant. Furthermore, the PA4130 isogenic mutant showed substantial attenuation in disease models of Drosophila melanogaster and Caenorhabditis elegans as well as reduced toxicity in human cell lines. Mice infected with this mutant demon-strated an 80% increased survival rate in acute and agar bead lung infection models. PA4130 codes for a protein with homology to nitrite and sulfite reductases. Overexpression of PA4130 in the presence of the siroheme synthase CysG enabled its purification as a soluble protein. Methyl viologen oxidation assays with purified PA4130 showed that this enzyme is a nitrite reductase operating in a ferredoxin-dependent manner. The preference for nitrite and production of ammonium revealed that PA4130 is an ammonia:ferredoxin nitrite reductase and hence was named NirA. IMPORTANCE The emergence of widespread antimicrobial resistance has led to the need for development of novel therapeutic interventions. Antivirulence strategies are an attractive alternative to classic antimicrobial therapy; however, they require identification of new specific targets which can be exploited in drug discovery pro-grams. The host-specific nature of P. aeruginosa virulence adds complexity to the discovery of these types of targets. Using a sequence of in vitro assays and phylogeneti-cally diverse in vivo disease models, we have identified a PA4130 mutant with reduced production in a number of virulence traits and severe attenuation across all infection models tested. Characterization of PA4130 revealed that it is a ferredoxin-nitrite reductase and hence was named NirA. These results, together with attenuation of nirA mutants in different clinical isolates, high level conservation of its gene product in P. aeruginosa genomes, and the lack of orthologues in human genomes, make NirA an attractive antivirulence target.
AB - The opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa produces an arsenal of virulence factors causing a wide range of diseases in multiple hosts and is difficult to eradicate due to its intrinsic resistance to antibiotics. With the antibacterial pipeline drying up, antivirulence therapy has become an attractive alternative strategy to the traditional use of antibiotics to treat P. aeruginosa infections. To identify P. aeruginosa genes required for virulence in multiple hosts, a random library of Tn5 mutants in strain PAO1-L was previously screened in vitro for those showing pleiotropic effects in the production of virulence phenotypes. Using this strategy, we identified a Tn5 mutant with an insertion in PA4130 showing reduced levels of a number of virulence traits in vitro. Construction of an isogenic mutant in this gene presented results similar to those for the Tn5 mutant. Furthermore, the PA4130 isogenic mutant showed substantial attenuation in disease models of Drosophila melanogaster and Caenorhabditis elegans as well as reduced toxicity in human cell lines. Mice infected with this mutant demon-strated an 80% increased survival rate in acute and agar bead lung infection models. PA4130 codes for a protein with homology to nitrite and sulfite reductases. Overexpression of PA4130 in the presence of the siroheme synthase CysG enabled its purification as a soluble protein. Methyl viologen oxidation assays with purified PA4130 showed that this enzyme is a nitrite reductase operating in a ferredoxin-dependent manner. The preference for nitrite and production of ammonium revealed that PA4130 is an ammonia:ferredoxin nitrite reductase and hence was named NirA. IMPORTANCE The emergence of widespread antimicrobial resistance has led to the need for development of novel therapeutic interventions. Antivirulence strategies are an attractive alternative to classic antimicrobial therapy; however, they require identification of new specific targets which can be exploited in drug discovery pro-grams. The host-specific nature of P. aeruginosa virulence adds complexity to the discovery of these types of targets. Using a sequence of in vitro assays and phylogeneti-cally diverse in vivo disease models, we have identified a PA4130 mutant with reduced production in a number of virulence traits and severe attenuation across all infection models tested. Characterization of PA4130 revealed that it is a ferredoxin-nitrite reductase and hence was named NirA. These results, together with attenuation of nirA mutants in different clinical isolates, high level conservation of its gene product in P. aeruginosa genomes, and the lack of orthologues in human genomes, make NirA an attractive antivirulence target.
KW - Disease model
KW - Disease models
KW - Genome-wide screening
KW - Nitrite reductase
KW - Pseudomonas aeruginosa
KW - Transposon mutagenesis
KW - Virulence determinants
KW - Virulence target
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85104448720
U2 - 10.1128/mBio.00207-21
DO - 10.1128/mBio.00207-21
M3 - Article
C2 - 33879591
AN - SCOPUS:85104448720
SN - 2161-2129
VL - 12
JO - mBio
JF - mBio
IS - 2
M1 - e00207-21
ER -