Visualizing Staphylococcus aureus pathogenic membrane modification within the host infection environment by multimodal imaging mass spectrometry
William J. Perry (VanderBilt University)
Caroline M. Grunenwald (Vanderbilt University Medical Center)
R. Van de Plas (TU Delft - Team Raf Van de Plas, VanderBilt University)
James C. Witten (Cleveland Clinic Heart and Vascular Institute)
Daniel R. Martin (Cleveland Clinic Lerner Research Institute)
Suneel S. Apte (Cleveland Clinic Lerner Research Institute)
James E. Cassat (VanderBilt University, Vanderbilt University Medical Center)
Gösta B. Pettersson (Cleveland Clinic Heart and Vascular Institute)
Richard M. Caprioli (VanderBilt University)
Eric P. Skaar (Vanderbilt University Medical Center, VanderBilt University)
Jeffrey M. Spraggins (VanderBilt University)
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Abstract
Bacterial pathogens have evolved virulence factors to colonize, replicate, and disseminate within the vertebrate host. Although there is an expanding body of literature describing how bacterial pathogens regulate their virulence repertoire in response to environmental signals, it is challenging to directly visualize virulence response within the host tissue microenvironment. Multimodal imaging approaches enable visualization of host-pathogen molecular interactions. Here we demonstrate multimodal integration of high spatial resolution imaging mass spectrometry and microscopy to visualize Staphylococcus aureus envelope modifications within infected murine and human tissues. Data-driven image fusion of fluorescent bacterial reporters and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance imaging mass spectrometry uncovered S. aureus lysyl-phosphatidylglycerol lipids, localizing to select bacterial communities within infected tissue. Absence of lysyl-phosphatidylglycerols is associated with decreased pathogenicity during vertebrate colonization as these lipids provide protection against the innate immune system. The presence of distinct staphylococcal lysyl-phosphatidylglycerol distributions within murine and human infections suggests a heterogeneous, spatially oriented microbial response to host defenses.