Staphyococcus aureus and especially the epidemic methicillin-resistant S. aureus strains cause severe necrotizing pneumonia. The mechanisms whereby these organisms invade across the mucosal epithelial barrier to initiate invasive infection are not well understood. Protein A (SpA), a highly conserved and abundant surface protein of S. aureus, activates TNF receptor 1 and EGF receptor (EGFR) signaling cascades that can perturb the cytoskeleton. We demonstrate that wild-type S. aureus, but not spa mutants, invade across polarized airway epithelial cell monolayers via the paracellular junctions. SpA stimulated a RhoA/ROCK/MLC cascade, resulting in the contraction of the cytoskeleton. SpA + but not SpA - mutants stimulated activation of EGFR and along with subsequent calpain activity cleaved the membrane-spanning junctional proteins occludin and E-cadherin, facilitating staphylococcal transmigration through the cell-cell junctions. Treatment of polarized human airway epithelial monolayers with inhibitors of ROCK, EGFR, MAPKs, or calpain prevented staphylococcal penetration through the monolayers. In vivo, blocking calpain activity impeded bacterial invasion into the lung parenchyma. Thus, S. aureus exploits multiple receptors available on the airway mucosal surface to facilitate invasion across epithelial barriers. © 2011 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Soong, G., Martin, F. J., Chun, J., Cohen, T. S., Ahn, D. S., & Prince, A. (2011). Staphylococcus aureus protein A mediates invasion across airway epithelial cells through activation of RhoA GTPase signaling and proteolytic activity. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 286(41), 35891–35898. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M111.295386
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