RESUMO
Necrotizing soft tissue infections caused by Streptococcus pyogenes (group A streptococcus [GAS]) are characterized by rapid and extensive necrosis of fascia and muscle. Molecular epidemiological studies have demonstrated a positive correlation between GAS isolates that cause invasive infections and the production of S. pyogenes NAD+-glycohydrolase (SPN), an NADase secreted by GAS, but the effect of SPN on muscle cells has not been described. Thus, using standard ßNAD+ and ATP quantification assays, we investigated the effects of SPN on cultured human skeletal muscle cell (SkMC) ßNAD+ and ATP with and without streptolysin O (SLO)-a secreted cholesterol-dependent cytolysin known to act synergistically with SPN. We found that culture supernatants from GAS strains producing SLO and SPN depleted intracellular ßNAD+ and ATP, while exotoxins from a GAS strain producing SLO and an enzymatically-inactive form of SPN had no effect on ßNAD+ or ATP. Addition of purified, enzymatically-active SPN to NADase-negative culture supernatants or sterile media reconstituted ßNAD+ depletion but had no effect ATP levels. Further, SPN-mediated ßNAD+ depletion could be augmented by SLO or the homologous cholesterol-dependent cytolysin, perfringolysin O (PFO). Remarkably, SPN-mediated ßNAD+ depletion was SkMC-specific, as purified SPN had minimal effect on epithelial cell ßNAD+. Taken together, this study identifies a previously unrecognized role for SPN as a major disruptor of skeletal muscle ßNAD+. Such activity could contribute to the rapid and widespread myonecrosis characteristic of severe GAS soft tissue infections.