Staphylococcus aureus exhibits heterogeneous siderophore production within the vertebrate host.
William J PerryJeffrey M SpragginsJessica R SheldonCaroline M GrunenwaldDavid E HeinrichsJames E CassatEric P SkaarRichard M CaprioliPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2019)
Siderophores, iron-scavenging small molecules, are fundamental to bacterial nutrient metal acquisition and enable pathogens to overcome challenges imposed by nutritional immunity. Multimodal imaging mass spectrometry allows visualization of host-pathogen iron competition, by mapping siderophores within infected tissue. We have observed heterogeneous distributions of Staphylococcus aureus siderophores across infectious foci, challenging the paradigm that the vertebrate host is a uniformly iron-depleted environment to invading microbes.