What was studied?
This study focused on the defense mechanisms employed by Group A Streptococcus (GAS) against methylglyoxal, a reactive and toxic dicarbonyl compound. The research specifically investigated the function of the glyoxalase system—particularly the enzyme Glyoxylase I (GloA)—in detoxifying methylglyoxal and its implications for bacterial virulence and survival in the presence of human neutrophils. Bioinformatic analysis revealed that GAS lacks methylglyoxal synthase, the enzyme responsible for endogenous methylglyoxal production, suggesting that the glyoxalase system is dedicated to detoxifying externally sourced methylglyoxal, likely from host immune cells. Using a genetically engineered GloA-deficient GAS mutant, the study assessed sensitivity to methylglyoxal, survival against neutrophil killing, and virulence in a murine infection model, while also exploring the enzymatic and regulatory dynamics of GloA in the context of heavy metal and aldehyde stress.
Who was studied?
The subjects of this original research were both in vitro bacterial cultures and in vivo animal models. The bacterial strains studied included wild-type Group A Streptococcus pyogenes (M1T1 strain 5448), a GloA-deficient mutant (5448figloA), and a genetically complemented strain. Human neutrophils, isolated from healthy blood donors, were used in killing assays to evaluate bacterial survival. Additionally, transgenic humanized plasminogen mice were employed for in vivo virulence testing, measuring both survival and the dissemination of GAS in the bloodstream following subcutaneous infection. The experimental design integrated both microbial genetic manipulation and host-pathogen interaction assays to elucidate the role of methylglyoxal detoxification in GAS pathogenesis.
Most important findings
| Critical Points | Details |
|---|---|
| GAS lacks methylglyoxal synthase | Bioinformatic analysis confirmed that GAS does not possess the gene for methylglyoxal synthase, indicating it cannot synthesize methylglyoxal endogenously, but it does contain a functional glyoxalase detoxification system, presumably to detoxify methylglyoxal from external, likely host, sources. |
| GloA-deficient mutant is hypersensitive to methylglyoxal | Deletion of the GloA gene made GAS significantly more sensitive to methylglyoxal, with impaired growth and survival at concentrations above 6 mM compared to wild-type and complemented strains. D-lactate production assays confirmed that only strains with functional GloA could detoxify methylglyoxal. |
| Glyoxalase system is specific for methylglyoxal detoxification | The GloA-deficient strain showed no increased susceptibility to other reactive aldehydes, suggesting the glyoxalase system in GAS is highly specific for methylglyoxal detoxification. |
| Human neutrophils produce methylglyoxal as an antimicrobial agent | The GloA-deficient mutant was significantly more susceptible to human neutrophil killing, which was abolished when neutrophil myeloperoxidase (MPO) was inhibited or under glucose-limiting conditions—demonstrating that methylglyoxal production by neutrophils, dependent on MPO and glucose, contributes to bacterial killing. |
| GloA expression is inducible by methylglyoxal | Quantitative RT-PCR showed that gloA expression was upregulated more than fourfold in wild-type GAS upon exposure to methylglyoxal, indicating a regulated stress response. |
| Impaired dissemination and growth in blood for GloA-deficient mutant | In murine models, the GloA-deficient mutant disseminated into the bloodstream much later than wild type but did not ultimately affect overall virulence. In ex vivo human blood, the mutant exhibited significantly reduced growth, suggesting an important role for methylglyoxal detoxification in early stages of systemic infection and resistance to host immune clearance. |
Key implications
This study demonstrates that the glyoxalase system, particularly Glyoxylase I, is crucial for GAS defense against host-produced methylglyoxal, directly impacting its survival against neutrophil-mediated killing and initial systemic dissemination. For heavy metal certification programs, this underscores the importance of monitoring detoxification systems, as resistance to aldehyde stress is a key factor in pathogen persistence and virulence during infection.
Citation
Zhang MM, Ong C-LY, Walker MJ, McEwan AG. Defence against methylglyoxal in Group A Streptococcus: a role for Glyoxylase I in bacterial virulence and survival in neutrophils? FEMS Pathog Dis. 2016;74(2):ftv122. doi:10.1093/femspd/ftv122
Heavy metals are high-density elements that accumulate in the body and environment, disrupting biological processes. Lead, cadmium, arsenic, mercury, nickel, tin, aluminum, and chromium are of greatest concern due to persistence, bioaccumulation, and health risks, making them central to the HMTC program’s safety standards.