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Glycine, serine and threonine metabolism confounds efficacy of complement-mediated killing.


ABSTRACT: Serum resistance is a poorly understood but common trait of some difficult-to-treat pathogenic strains of bacteria. Here, we report that glycine, serine and threonine catabolic pathway is down-regulated in serum-resistant Escherichia coli, whereas exogenous glycine reverts the serum resistance and effectively potentiates serum to eliminate clinically-relevant bacterial pathogens in vitro and in vivo. We find that exogenous glycine increases the formation of membrane attack complex on bacterial membrane through two previously unrecognized regulations: 1) glycine negatively and positively regulates metabolic flux to purine biosynthesis and Krebs cycle, respectively. 2) ?-Ketoglutarate inhibits adenosine triphosphate synthase, which in together promote the formation of cAMP/CRP regulon to increase the expression of complement-binding proteins HtrE, NfrA, and YhcD. The results could lead to effective strategies for managing the infection with serum-resistant bacteria, an especially valuable approach for treating individuals with weak acquired immunity but a normal complement system.

SUBMITTER: Cheng ZX 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6658569 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Jul

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Glycine, serine and threonine metabolism confounds efficacy of complement-mediated killing.

Cheng Zhi-Xue ZX   Guo Chang C   Chen Zhuang-Gui ZG   Yang Tian-Ci TC   Zhang Jian-Ying JY   Wang Jie J   Zhu Jia-Xin JX   Li Dan D   Zhang Tian-Tuo TT   Li Hui H   Peng Bo B   Peng Xuan-Xian XX  

Nature communications 20190725 1


Serum resistance is a poorly understood but common trait of some difficult-to-treat pathogenic strains of bacteria. Here, we report that glycine, serine and threonine catabolic pathway is down-regulated in serum-resistant Escherichia coli, whereas exogenous glycine reverts the serum resistance and effectively potentiates serum to eliminate clinically-relevant bacterial pathogens in vitro and in vivo. We find that exogenous glycine increases the formation of membrane attack complex on bacterial m  ...[more]

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