Mycobacteria Exploit Host Hyaluronan for Efficient Extracellular Replication

Male 0301 basic medicine QH301-705.5 Colony Count, Microbial Mice 03 medical and health sciences Cell Line, Tumor Animals Humans Biology (General) Glucuronosyltransferase Hyaluronic Acid Lung Cells, Cultured Cell Proliferation Glycosaminoglycans Histocytochemistry Mycobacterium tuberculosis RC581-607 Macaca mulatta Mycobacterium bovis Rats 3. Good health Host-Pathogen Interactions Immunologic diseases. Allergy Hyaluronan Synthases Research Article
DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1000643 Publication Date: 2009-10-29T21:44:42Z
ABSTRACT
In spite of the importance of hyaluronan in host protection against infectious organisms in the alveolar spaces, its role in mycobacterial infection is unknown. In a previous study, we found that mycobacteria interact with hyaluronan on lung epithelial cells. Here, we have analyzed the role of hyaluronan after mycobacterial infection was established and found that pathogenic mycobacteria can grow by utilizing hyaluronan as a carbon source. Both mouse and human possess 3 kinds of hyaluronan synthases (HAS), designated HAS1, HAS2, and HAS3. Utilizing individual HAS-transfected cells, we show that HAS1 and HAS3 but not HAS2 support growth of mycobacteria. We found that the major hyaluronan synthase expressed in the lung is HAS1, and that its expression was increased after infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Histochemical analysis demonstrated that hyaluronan profoundly accumulated in the granulomatous legion of the lungs in M. tuberculosis-infected mice and rhesus monkeys that died from tuberculosis. We detected hyaluronidase activity in the lysate of mycobacteria and showed that it was critical for hyaluronan-dependent extracellular growth. Finally, we showed that L-Ascorbic acid 6-hexadecanoate, a hyaluronidase inhibitor, suppressed growth of mycobacteria in vivo. Taken together, our data show that pathogenic mycobacteria exploit an intrinsic host-protective molecule, hyaluronan, to grow in the respiratory tract and demonstrate the potential usefulness of hyaluronidase inhibitors against mycobacterial diseases.
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