INTRODUCTION
Methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is a dominant cause of nosocomial diseases around the world. In a study of nonhospitalized adults in Germany, up to 40% of participants were colonized with
S. aureus and 0.7% with MRSA (
1). Since the late 1980s, the glycopeptide antibiotic vancomycin has been the drug of choice against MRSA (
2). However, the introduction of a new antibiotic for the treatment of infections often leads to the evolution of new resistance mechanisms. The first clinical
S. aureus strain with reduced susceptibility to vancomycin was reported from Japan in 1996 (
3).
According to CLSI standards,
S. aureus is classified as vancomycin susceptible with a MIC of up to 2 μg/ml, as vancomycin intermediate with an MIC between 4 and 8 μg/ml, and as resistant with an MIC equal to or above 16 μg/ml. Vancomycin-intermediate
S. aureus (VISA) does not contain a
van operon but instead develops reduced susceptibility through the accumulation of mutations during treatment with vancomycin (
4). Multiple genes and mutations have been implicated in generating VISA from susceptible parent strains. These mutations are found in regulatory two-component systems (TCSs) like the essential
walKR operon,
vraSR, and
graSR, involved in autolysis and cell wall metabolism. They also affect genes coding for the RNA polymerase subunit
rpoB, wall teichoic acid attachment proteins like
msrR, or proteolytic proteins like
clpP (
5–10). In the vast majority of
S. aureus strains, a single mutation is not sufficient to convert a susceptible strain into a VISA strain; however, a WalR(K208R) amino acid exchange found in a clinical isolate yielded an MIC of 4 μg/ml (
5,
11). Common characteristics among VISA include (i) a thickened cell wall, which often exhibits an increase in free
d-Ala-
d-Ala residues, due to a lower level of cross-linking; (ii) a decreased virulence; and (iii) a reduced autolysis (
12). The decreased cross-linking of the cell wall described in several VISA strains (
13,
14) enables adsorption of vancomycin to the free
d-Ala-
d-Ala residues and thereby prevents binding of vancomycin to lipid II via the so-called “clogging effect” (
15). Both cross-linking through penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs) and peptidoglycan (PGN) turnover are influenced by the wall teichoic acids (WTAs) in the cell wall. The absence of WTA biosynthesis prevents the localization of PBP4 and AtlA, the major autolysin, to the division septum and instead disperses the enzymes throughout the cell surface (
16,
17).
Previously, a laboratory VISA strain,
S. aureus VC40, was generated through serial passage of
S. aureus RN4220Δ
mutS in the presence of increasing concentrations of vancomycin (
18). The strain reached a vancomycin MIC of 64 μg/ml in brain heart infusion (BHI), which meets the criteria for vancomycin-resistant
S. aureus (VRSA). Since
S. aureus VC40 does not contain a
van operon, like all other isolates categorized as VRSA, it is still labeled as a VISA strain (
6). Whole-genome sequencing revealed a total of 79 mutations in 75 gene loci. Most noteworthy were two amino acid exchanges in VraS(L114S and D242G) and one in WalK(I544M). To judge the effect of the VraS exchanges, both mutations were reconstituted into the
S. aureus NCTC8325 background, which increased the MIC against vancomycin from 1 to 4 μg/ml in BHI and also reduced Triton X-100-induced autolysis to a level comparable to
S. aureus VC40 (
6).
S. aureus NCTC8325 was chosen for the reconstitution because it is
agr positive and in this regard similar to
S. aureus VC40, which had repaired the mutation in
agr present in
S. aureus RN4220Δ
mutS. In addition,
S. aureus VC40 had an increased cell wall thickness (62.36 nm diameter) compared with its parent strain and the reconstituted VraS mutant (
S. aureus RN4220Δ
mutS, 16.97 nm;
S. aureus NCTC8325, 16.71 nm;
S. aureus VraS(VC40), 38.25 nm) (
6). This study elucidates the link between reduced vancomycin susceptibility and the compositional changes in the cell wall structure of
S. aureus with a focus on wall teichoic acids, especially the WTA glycosylation pattern. We demonstrate here that the cell wall of
S. aureus VC40 shows a very low cross-linking and is stabilized against the activity of the autolytic enzymes by an altered glycosylation and a higher content of wall teichoic acids.
DISCUSSION
The three main characteristics of most clinically relevant and laboratory-generated VISA strains are an increased cell wall diameter with a decreased cross-linking, a decreased autolysis, and attenuated virulence. These characteristics are well documented for a large number of isolates (
11,
12), but the underlying mechanisms need further research. Indeed, the three VISA strains of this study exhibit these features to some extent as well.
The most important characteristic for the decreased vancomycin susceptibility is the cell wall of
S. aureus. Vancomycin forms hydrogen bonds with the
d-Ala-
d-Ala terminus of lipid II and/or the free PGN pentapeptides (
12). An increase in cell wall thickness and a decrease in cross-linking lead to an increase in free
d-Ala-
d-Ala residues in the PGN. Therefore, the ability to absorb vancomycin into the cell wall is directly proportional to these metrics. In turn, this binding of vancomycin prevents the diffusion of vancomycin to lipid II in the cell wall biosynthetic complex (
15), which is the reason for the high vancomycin MIC of
S. aureus VC40. The cost of a decrease in PGN cross-linking for
S. aureus cells is a reduction in cell wall stability caused by a larger mesh size (
30). To balance the low level of peptide bridges, the cells need to decrease their autolysis. Here, it is shown that
S. aureus VC40 counters the decrease in cross-linking by a modification of wall teichoic acids, especially by β-glycosylation, to hinder AtlA activity and thus protect its fragile PGN.
A decreased autolysis, because of an altered autolysin profile, specific mutations, a decreased expression, or a decreased affinity toward the PGN, leads to improper cell separation and an increased cell wall thickness. Autolysins in
S. aureus are regulated via the TCS WalRK and most likely processed through proteases regulated by the
msaABCR operon (
31,
32). WalK carries a mutation in
S. aureus VC40 (
6). Interestingly, real-time PCR measurements of
ssaA,
lytM,
atlA, and
sceD transcripts suggested that most autolysins in
S. aureus VC40 including AtlA are upregulated (
6). It seems that an altered processing of AtlA, potentially via Ssp serine and cysteine proteases, which are negatively regulated by
msaABCR (
32), are responsible for the autolysin profile in the zymogram. This factor, together with the reduced affinity of the autolysin toward the PGN due to the β-glycosylated WTA, as well as an increase in overall WTA concentration, reduced the autolysis in
S. aureus VC40, despite the increase in autolysin expression.
The role of wall teichoic acids in vancomycin resistance is incompletely understood. In 2003, Sieradzki and Tomasz (
33) found a quantitative or qualitative change in the WTA in the vancomycin intermediate progeny of the clinical isolate JH1. All VISA strains in our study had an increased WTA concentration with an increased GlcNAc substitution and, in the case of
S. aureus VC40, also an increase in
d-alanine. Increased wall teichoic acid production and
d-alanylation are also common among daptomycin-resistant clinical isolates, which are often cross-resistant to vancomycin (
34). This finding also applies to
S. aureus VC40 which shows cross-resistance to daptomycin (
6). In a paper by Peschel et al. (
35) the strains lacking
d-alanine substitutions on the WTA exhibited an increased susceptibility to glycopeptide antibiotics.
d-Alanylation of the WTA is governed by the
dlt operon, which is GraSR dependent. With an increase in positively charged
d-alanine residues, the cell wall is less susceptible toward cationic antimicrobials since the
d-alanine substitution impedes the ionic interaction of the cationic vancomycin with the negatively charged teichoic acids (
36). This charge-dependent decrease in binding of vancomycin could also play a role in the
S. aureus VC40 phenotype. Interestingly, this strain has an additional mutation in
mprF, coding for a membrane protein that modifies anionic phosphatidylglycerol with
l-lysine and thereby diminishing the affinity of the cytoplasmic membrane for cationic antimicrobial peptides. Through allelic exchange, it could be demonstrated that this mutation alone had no effect on the adsorption of cytochrome
c to the cell envelope of
S. aureus VC40, which was therefore influenced solely by the WTA
d-alanylation (see Fig. S5 in the supplemental material).
The checkerboard MIC assay underlines the importance of the WTA for the reduced susceptibility toward vancomycin for
S. aureus VC40. WTAs also have a connection to methicillin resistance in strains with PBP2a. Inhibiting the first enzyme of WTA synthesis TarO sensitizes MRSA to β-lactams (
37). However, a synergistic effect of vancomycin and tunicamycin on any of the MRSA tested was not reported. Brown et al. (
38) further showed that the glycosylation pattern is important for the sensitization to β-lactams. In
S. aureus VC40 and its revertant strain
S. aureus VC40R, the glycosylation of WTA also seemed to have a major impact on the phenotype. Both strains showed a strong reduction in phage susceptibility. A contrast in phage typeability in isogenic VISA/VSSA pairs was also observed by Gustafson et al. (
39). In our study, the reason for the absence of phage typeability of
S. aureus VC40 was the difference in the glycosylation pattern of the WTA.
Myoviridae recognize the backbone of the WTA and show that this polymer is still accessible for phages in all strains.
Podoviridae attach only to cell walls with β-glycosylated WTA (
40), which is the case for
S. aureus VC40,
S. aureus NCTC8325, and
S. aureus VraS(VC40). The NMR analysis of
S. aureus VC40 and its relatives confirmed these results.
Glycosylation of
S. aureus wall teichoic acids is influenced by the salt concentration in the environment. The β-GlcNAc anomer is integrated preferentially into the WTA under high salinity at the expense of the α-GlcNAc anomer (
29). On the other hand, salt stress decreases the transcription of the
dlt operon and in turn the
d-alanylation of the WTA as well (
41). Here, it could be shown that 4% NaCl leads to the incorporation of the β-1,4-GlcNAc anomer in the
S. aureus VC40R TA.
S. aureus NCTC8325 and
S. aureus VraS(VC40) may also integrate a mixture of alpha and beta sugars in the absence of salt stress, as both are lysed by
Podoviridae as well as
Siphoviridae. The incorporation of β-1,4-GlcNAc into the WTA resulted in a stunning decrease of the vancomycin susceptibility in the revertant strain
S. aureus VC40R. In contrast, growth of the parental strains
S. aureus RN4220Δ
mutS under high salt concentrations and the overexpression of TarS, which should both induce the β-glycosylation of WTA, did not alter the susceptibility toward vancomycin in these strains. Likewise,
S. aureus VraS(VC40) displayed no decreased vancomycin susceptibility in medium with NaCl. However, this strain already contained β-glycosylated WTA, as shown from the lysis by
Podoviridae. From this finding, it can be concluded that the β-glycosylation of the WTA leads only to a decrease in vancomycin susceptibility when other VISA characteristics, like the
walK mutation, low cross-linking, and an increased cell wall diameter, are already present. The effect of osmolarity on the vancomycin MIC is noted in some papers (
42). Goldstein et al. (
43) found that 14 clinical VISA isolates increased their vancomycin MIC in BHI medium with 4% NaCl up to 3-fold compared with that of medium without salt. Other MRSA and MSSA control strains as well as the VISA strain Mu50 and hVISA strain Mu3 showed no effect. Interestingly, clinical VISA strains of the clonal complex 5, like Mu50, Mu3, JH9, and others, often possess only the
tarS gene, which is responsible for the β-glycosylation of WTA (
44). In contrast, Howden et al. (
45) showed in microarray experiments with clinical strain pairs that had acquired resistance during treatment with vancomycin that three of five VISA strains had significantly downregulated
tarM, which was responsible for α-glycosylation of the WTA, compared with their VSSA counterparts. It is established that wall teichoic acids are spatial and temporal regulators of PBP4 and AtlA activity (
16,
17). Both enzymes operate at the cell division septum, which is devoid of mature WTA. Biswas et al. (
46) suggested that the negatively charged WTAs retain protons in the cell wall, which creates an acidic environment that leads to low AtlA activity. Here, it was shown that the substitution of WTA with β-1,4-GlcNAc leads to a reduced binding of AtlA to the cell wall. This result presents a novel connection between autolysis, WTA glycosylation, and reduced vancomycin susceptibility in VISA strains and corresponds to early observations indicating that changes in the cell wall biochemistry of laboratory and clinical VISA might affect the activity of AtlA (
47). However, this mechanism may be specific only for some VISA strains and depend on additional mutations present in strains
S. aureus VC40 and
S. aureus VC40R. Additionally, it must be noted that the resistance level of
S. aureus VC40 is far higher than that of clinical isolates.
The strain
S. aureus VC40 has two mutations in
vraS, encoding a histidine kinase of a cell wall damage-sensing TCS. VraS is a hot spot for mutations in clinical VISA strains, although double mutations are rare and have not been described before. Only three clinical teicoplanin-resistant strains from Kato et al. (
48) have double mutations in VraS (V138M/V236A, I5N/P246S, and A172T/F321L). These mutations in
S. aureus VC40 lead to a steady elevated expression of VraSR-regulated genes like
vraS,
lytM, and
sgtB. The introduction of these mutations into the
S. aureus NCTC8325 background resulted in the same effect (
6). In
S. aureus VC40R, the additional mutation in
vraR abrogates phosphorylation and in turn would decrease the expression of regulated genes. Therefore, any differences from the wild type, shared by
S. aureus VC40 and
S. aureus VraS(VC40) and reversed in the
S. aureus VC40R strain, have the potential to be linked to the
vraSR TCS. In this sense, the reduced autolysis and the increased substitution of the WTA with sugars could be associated with the altered
vraSR activity.
In conclusion, compositional changes in the WTAs are observed in many clinical and laboratory VISA strains, either through quantitative modifications of WTA concentration or
d-alanylation (
33–35). Here, it is shown for the first time that the glycosylation pattern of wall teichoic acids may be another facet of decreasing vancomycin susceptibility. The switch to a mixture of α- and β-GlcNAc substitutions on the WTA led to an 8-fold increase in MIC in the revertant
S. aureus VC40R and could be due to the decrease in AtlA binding to the cell wall and subsequent decreased autolysis.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
A special thanks goes to Guoqing Xia from the University of Tübingen for providing the three Myoviridae (ϕK, ϕSK311, and ϕ812) and Podoviridae (ϕP68, ϕ66, and ϕ44) as well as the strain S. aureus RN4220ΔtarMΔtarS.
Conceptualization, M.H. and G.B.; Data Curation, M.H., A.B., and G.B.; Formal Analysis, M.H.; Funding Acquisition, G.B.; Investigation, M.H., U.B., S.N., A.D., A.S.S., L.M., K.A., and A.B.; Methodology, M.H.; Supervision, G.B.; Visualization, M.H.; Writing – Original Draft Preparation, M.H.; Writing – Review & Editing, U.B., A.D., A.B., and G.B. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.