Clostridioides difficile superoxide reductase mitigates oxygen sensitivity.
Rebecca KochanowskyKatelyn E CarothersBryan Angelo P RoxasFarhan AnwarV K ViswanathanGayatri VedantamPublished in: Journal of bacteriology (2024)
Clostridioides difficile causes a serious diarrheal disease and is a common healthcare-associated bacterial pathogen. Although it has a major impact on human health, the mechanistic details of C. difficile intestinal colonization remain undefined. C. difficile is highly sensitive to oxygen and requires anaerobic conditions for in vitro growth. However, the mammalian gut is not devoid of oxygen, and C. difficile tolerates moderate oxidative stress in vivo . The C. difficile genome encodes several antioxidant proteins, including a predicted superoxide reductase (SOR) that is upregulated upon exposure to antimicrobial peptides. The goal of this study was to establish SOR enzymatic activity and assess its role in protecting C. difficile against oxygen exposure. Insertional inactivation of sor rendered C. difficile more sensitive to superoxide, indicating that SOR contributes to antioxidant defense. Heterologous C. difficile sor expression in Escherichia coli conferred protection against superoxide-dependent growth inhibition, and the corresponding cell lysates showed superoxide scavenging activity. Finally, a C. difficile SOR mutant exhibited global proteome changes under oxygen stress when compared to the parent strain. Collectively, our data establish the enzymatic activity of C. difficile SOR, confirm its role in protection against oxidative stress, and demonstrate SOR's broader impacts on the C. difficile vegetative cell proteome.IMPORTANCE Clostridioides difficile is an important pathogen strongly associated with healthcare settings and capable of causing severe diarrheal disease. While considered a strict anaerobe in vitro , C. difficile has been shown to tolerate low levels of oxygen in the mammalian host. Among other well-characterized antioxidant proteins, the C. difficile genome encodes a predicted superoxide reductase (SOR), an understudied component of antioxidant defense in pathogens. The significance of the research reported herein is the characterization of SOR's enzymatic activity, including confirmation of its role in protecting C. difficile against oxidative stress. This furthers our understanding of C. difficile pathogenesis and presents a potential new avenue for targeted therapies.
Keyphrases
- clostridium difficile
- oxidative stress
- healthcare
- hydrogen peroxide
- escherichia coli
- human health
- risk assessment
- anti inflammatory
- mesenchymal stem cells
- poor prognosis
- gene expression
- staphylococcus aureus
- dna methylation
- genome wide
- early onset
- machine learning
- cystic fibrosis
- data analysis
- health insurance
- heat stress
- liquid chromatography