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      Exploitation of syndecan-1 shedding by Pseudomonas aeruginosa enhances virulence.

      Nature
      Animals, Animals, Newborn, Bacterial Adhesion, Disease Models, Animal, Heparin, pharmacology, Heparitin Sulfate, metabolism, Lung, microbiology, Lung Diseases, Membrane Glycoproteins, chemistry, physiology, Mice, Mice, Inbred BALB C, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Proteoglycans, Pseudomonas Infections, immunology, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, pathogenicity, Syndecan-1, Syndecans, Virulence

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          Abstract

          Cell-surface heparan sulphate proteoglycans (HSPGs) are ubiquitous and abundant receptors/co-receptors of extracellular ligands, including many microbes. Their role in microbial infections is poorly defined, however, because no cell-surface HSPG has been clearly connected to the pathogenesis of a particular microbe. We have previously shown that Pseudomonas aeruginosa, through its virulence factor LasA, enhances the in vitro shedding of syndecan-1-the predominant cell-surface HSPG of epithelia. Here we show that shedding of syndecan-1 is also activated by P. aeruginosa in vivo, and that the resulting syndecan-1 ectodomains enhance bacterial virulence in newborn mice. Newborn mice deficient in syndecan-1 resist P. aeruginosa lung infection but become susceptible when given purified syndecan-1 ectodomains or heparin, but not when given ectodomain core protein, indicating that the ectodomain's heparan sulphate chains are the effectors. In wild-type newborn mice, inhibition of syndecan-1 shedding or inactivation of the shed ectodomain's heparan sulphate chains prevents lung infection. Our findings uncover a pathogenetic mechanism in which a host response to tissue injury-syndecan-1 shedding-is exploited to enhance microbial virulence apparently by modulating host defences.

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