Authors
Urvish Trivedi, Jonas S Madsen, Jake Everett, Cody Fell, Jakob Russel, Jakob Haaber, Heidi A Crosby, Alexander R Horswill, Mette Burmølle, Kendra P Rumbaugh, Søren J Sørensen
Publication date
2018/12/11
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
115
Issue
50
Pages
E11771-E11779
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Coagulation is an innate defense mechanism intended to limit blood loss and trap invading pathogens during infection. However, Staphylococcus aureus has the ability to hijack the coagulation cascade and generate clots via secretion of coagulases. Although many S. aureus have this characteristic, some do not. The population dynamics regarding this defining trait have yet to be explored. We report here that coagulases are public goods that confer protection against antimicrobials and immune factors within a local population or community, thus promoting growth and virulence. By utilizing variants of a methicillin-resistant S. aureus we infer that the secretion of coagulases is a cooperative trait, which is subject to exploitation by invading mutants that do not produce the public goods themselves. However, overexploitation, “tragedy of the commons,” does not occur at clinically relevant conditions. Our micrographs …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
U Trivedi, JS Madsen, J Everett, C Fell, J Russel… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2018