Syndecan-1 Promotes Streptococcus pneumoniae Corneal Infection by Facilitating the Assembly of Adhesive Fibronectin Fibrils
 Authors and Affiliations
 Authors and Affiliations
Akiko Jinno,a Atsuko Hayashida,a Howard F. Jenkinson,b Pyong Woo Parka,c,*
aDepartment of Medicine, Boston Children’s Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
bBristol Dental School, University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom
cDepartment of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
*Address correspondence to Pyong Woo Park
Abstract Subversion of heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) is thought to be a common virulence mechanism shared by many microbial pathogens. The prevailing assumption is that pathogens co-opt HSPGs as cell surface attachment receptors or as inhibitors of innate host defense. However, there are few data that clearly support this idea in vivo. We found that deletion of syndecan-1 (Sdc1), a major cell surface HSPG of epithelial cells, causes a gain of function in a mouse model of scarified corneal infection, where Sdc1−/− corneas were significantly less susceptible to Streptococcus pneumoniae infection. Administration of excess Sdc1 ectodomains significantly inhibited S. pneumoniae corneal infection, suggesting that Sdc1 promotes infection as a cell surface attachment receptor. However, S. pneumoniae did not interact with Sdc1 and Sdc1 was shed upon S. pneumoniae infection, indicating that Sdc1 does not directly support S. pneumoniae adhesion. Instead, Sdc1 promoted S. pneumoniae adhesion by driving the assembly of fibronectin (FN) fibrils in the corneal basement membrane to which S. pneumoniae attaches when infecting injured corneas. S. pneumoniae specifically bound to corneal FN via PavA, and PavA deletion significantly attenuated S. pneumoniae virulence in the cornea. Excess Sdc1 ectodomains inhibited S. pneumoniae corneal infection by binding to the Hep II domain and interfering with S. pneumoniae PavA binding to FN. These findings reveal a previously unknown virulence mechanism of S. pneumoniae where key extracellular matrix (ECM) interactions and structures that are essential for host cell homeostasis are exploited for bacterial pathogenesis.
KEYWORDS : extracellular matrix, host-pathogen interactions, keratitis, proteoglycans, syndecans
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