Glucose and Oxygen Levels Modulate the Pore-Forming Effects of Cholesterol-Dependent Cytolysin Pneumolysin from Streptococcus pneumoniae.

Hoffet, Michelle Salomé; Tomov, Nikola S.; Hupp, Sabrina; Mitchell, Timothy J; Iliev, Asparouh I. (2024). Glucose and Oxygen Levels Modulate the Pore-Forming Effects of Cholesterol-Dependent Cytolysin Pneumolysin from Streptococcus pneumoniae. Toxins, 16(6) MDPI 10.3390/toxins16060232

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A major Streptococcus pneumoniae pathogenic factor is the cholesterol-dependent cytolysin pneumolysin, binding membrane cholesterol and producing permanent lytic or transient pores. During brain infections, vascular damage with variable ischemia occurs. The role of ischemia on pneumolysin's pore-forming capacity remains unknown. In acute brain slice cultures and primary cultured glia, we studied acute toxin lysis (via propidium iodide staining and LDH release) and transient pore formation (by analyzing increases in the intracellular calcium). We analyzed normal peripheral tissue glucose conditions (80 mg%), normal brain glucose levels (20 mg%), and brain hypoglycemic conditions (3 mg%), in combinations either with normoxia (8% oxygen) or hypoxia (2% oxygen). At 80 mg% glucose, hypoxia enhanced cytolysis via pneumolysin. At 20 mg% glucose, hypoxia did not affect cell lysis, but impaired calcium restoration after non-lytic pore formation. Only at 3 mg% glucose, during normoxia, did pneumolysin produce stronger lysis. In hypoglycemic (3 mg% glucose) conditions, pneumolysin caused a milder calcium increase, but restoration was missing. Microglia bound more pneumolysin than astrocytes and demonstrated generally stronger calcium elevation. Thus, our work demonstrated that the toxin pore-forming capacity in cells continuously diminishes when oxygen is reduced, overlapping with a continuously reduced ability of cells to maintain homeostasis of the calcium influx once oxygen and glucose are reduced.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

04 Faculty of Medicine > Pre-clinic Human Medicine > Institute of Anatomy
04 Faculty of Medicine > Pre-clinic Human Medicine > Institute of Anatomy > Functional Anatomy

UniBE Contributor:

Hoffet, Michelle Salomé, Tomov, Nikola Stefanov, Hupp, Sabrina, Iliev, Asparouh Iliev

Subjects:

600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health

ISSN:

2072-6651

Publisher:

MDPI

Language:

English

Submitter:

Pubmed Import

Date Deposited:

27 Jun 2024 09:47

Last Modified:

27 Jun 2024 09:56

Publisher DOI:

10.3390/toxins16060232

PubMed ID:

38922127

Uncontrolled Keywords:

Streptococcus pneumoniae astrocytes brain hypoglycemia hypoxia ischemia microglia pneumolysin pore formation transient pores

BORIS DOI:

10.48350/198143

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/198143

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