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1.
Bacterial pathogens have evolved a specialized type III secretion system (T3SS) to translocate virulence effector proteins directly into eukaryotic target cells. Salmonellae deploy effectors that trigger localized actin reorganization to force their own entry into non-phagocytic host cells. Six effectors (SipC, SipA, SopE/2, SopB, SptP) can individually manipulate actin dynamics at the plasma membrane, which acts as a 'signaling hub' during Salmonella invasion. The extent of crosstalk between these spatially coincident effectors remains unknown. Here we describe trans and cisbinary entry effector interplay (BENEFIT) screens that systematically examine functional associations between effectors following their delivery into the host cell. The results reveal extensive ordered synergistic and antagonistic relationships and their relative potency, and illuminate an unexpectedly sophisticated signaling network evolved through longstanding pathogen-host interaction.  相似文献   

2.

Background

Pathogenic bacteria infecting both animals as well as plants use various mechanisms to transport virulence factors across their cell membranes and channel these proteins into the infected host cell. The type III secretion system represents such a mechanism. Proteins transported via this pathway (“effector proteins”) have to be distinguished from all other proteins that are not exported from the bacterial cell. Although a special targeting signal at the N-terminal end of effector proteins has been proposed in literature its exact characteristics remain unknown.

Methodology/Principal Findings

In this study, we demonstrate that the signals encoded in the sequences of type III secretion system effectors can be consistently recognized and predicted by machine learning techniques. Known protein effectors were compiled from the literature and sequence databases, and served as training data for artificial neural networks and support vector machine classifiers. Common sequence features were most pronounced in the first 30 amino acids of the effector sequences. Classification accuracy yielded a cross-validated Matthews correlation of 0.63 and allowed for genome-wide prediction of potential type III secretion system effectors in 705 proteobacterial genomes (12% predicted candidates protein), their chromosomes (11%) and plasmids (13%), as well as 213 Firmicute genomes (7%).

Conclusions/Significance

We present a signal prediction method together with comprehensive survey of potential type III secretion system effectors extracted from 918 published bacterial genomes. Our study demonstrates that the analyzed signal features are common across a wide range of species, and provides a substantial basis for the identification of exported pathogenic proteins as targets for future therapeutic intervention. The prediction software is publicly accessible from our web server (www.modlab.org).  相似文献   

3.

Background

Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) and enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC) are two categories of E. coli strains associated with human disease. A major virulence factor of both pathotypes is the expression of a type three secretion system (TTSS), responsible for their ability to adhere to gut mucosa causing a characteristic attaching and effacing lesion (A/E). The TTSS translocates effector proteins directly into the host cell that subvert mammalian cell biochemistry.

Methods/Principal Findings

We examined synthetic peptides designed to inhibit the TTSS. CoilA and CoilB peptides, both representing coiled-coil regions of the translocator protein EspA, and CoilD peptide, corresponding to a coiled–coil region of the needle protein EscF, were effective in inhibiting the TTSS dependent hemolysis of red blood cells by the EPEC E2348/69 strain. CoilA and CoilB peptides also reduced the formation of actin pedestals by the same strain in HEp-2 cells and impaired the TTSS-mediated protein translocation into the epithelial cell. Interestingly, CoilA and CoilB were able to block EspA assembly, destabilizing the TTSS and thereby Tir translocation. This blockage of EspA polymerization by CoilA or CoilB peptides, also inhibited the correct delivery of EspB and EspD as detected by immunoblotting. Interestingly, electron microscopy of bacteria incubated with the CoilA peptide showed a reduction of the length of EspA filaments.

Conclusions

Our data indicate that coiled-coil peptides can prevent the assembly and thus the functionality of the TTSS apparatus and suggest that these peptides could provide an attractive tool to block EPEC and EHEC pathogenesis.  相似文献   

4.
The hallmark of Salmonella entry into host cells is extensive rearrangements of the host actin cytoskeleton at the site of Salmonella contact with intestinal epithelial cells. SopE, SopE2 and SopB, three type III effectors of Salmonella pathogenicity island 1 (SPI-1), activate the Cdc42 and Rac1 signal transduction pathways to promote these rearrangements. SipA and SipC, two Salmonella type III-secreted actin-binding proteins, directly modulate host actin dynamics to facilitate bacterial uptake. Salmonella-induced actin cytoskeleton rearrangements are therefore the result of the coordinated action of a group of type III-secreted effector proteins.  相似文献   

5.
Upon contact with intestinal epithelial cells, Salmonella enterica serovar spp. inject a set of bacterial proteins into host cells via the bacterial SPI-1 type III secretion system. SopE, SopE2 and SopB, activate CDC42 and Rac to initiate actin cytoskeleton rearrangements. SipA and SipC, two Salmonella actin-binding proteins, directly modulate host actin dynamics to facilitate bacterial uptake. SptP promotes the recovery of the actin cytoskeleton rearrangements by antagonizing CDC42 and Rac. Therefore, Salmonella-induced reversible actin cytoskeleton rearrangements are the result of two coordinated steps: (i) stimulation of host signal transduction to indirectly promote actin rearrangements and (ii) direct modulation of actin dynamics.  相似文献   

6.

Background

The potato cyst nematode Globodera pallida has biotrophic interactions with its host. The nematode induces a feeding structure – the syncytium – which it keeps alive for the duration of the life cycle and on which it depends for all nutrients required to develop to the adult stage. Interactions of G. pallida with the host are mediated by effectors, which are produced in two sets of gland cells. These effectors suppress host defences, facilitate migration and induce the formation of the syncytium.

Results

The recent completion of the G. pallida genome sequence has allowed us to identify the effector complement from this species. We identify 128 orthologues of effectors from other nematodes as well as 117 novel effector candidates. We have used in situ hybridisation to confirm gland cell expression of a subset of these effectors, demonstrating the validity of our effector identification approach. We have examined the expression profiles of all effector candidates using RNAseq; this analysis shows that the majority of effectors fall into one of three clusters of sequences showing conserved expression characteristics (invasive stage nematode only, parasitic stage only or invasive stage and adult male only). We demonstrate that further diversity in the effector pool is generated by alternative splicing. In addition, we show that effectors target a diverse range of structures in plant cells, including the peroxisome. This is the first identification of effectors from any plant pathogen that target this structure.

Conclusion

This is the first genome scale search for effectors, combined to a life-cycle expression analysis, for any plant-parasitic nematode. We show that, like other phylogenetically unrelated plant pathogens, plant parasitic nematodes deploy hundreds of effectors in order to parasitise plants, with different effectors required for different phases of the infection process.

Electronic supplementary material

The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1471-2164-15-923) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

7.
Salmonella species trigger host membrane ruffling to force their internalization into non-phagocytic intestinal epithelial cells. This requires bacterial effector protein delivery into the target cell via a type III secretion system. Six translocated effectors manipulate cellular actin dynamics, but how their direct and indirect activities are spatially and temporally co-ordinated to promote productive cytoskeletal rearrangements remains essentially unexplored. To gain further insight into this process, we applied mechanical cell fractionation and immunofluorescence microscopy to systematically investigate the subcellular localization of epitope-tagged effectors in transiently transfected and Salmonella-infected cultured cells. Although five effectors contain no apparent membrane-targeting domains, all six localized exclusively in the target cell plasma membrane fraction and correspondingly were visualized at the cell periphery, from where they induced distinct effects on the actin cytoskeleton. Unexpectedly, no translocated effector pool was detectable in the cell cytosol. Using parallel in vitro assays, we demonstrate that the prenylated cellular GTPase Cdc42 is necessary and sufficient for membrane association of the Salmonella GTP exchange factor and GTPase-activating protein mimics SopE and SptP, which have no intrinsic lipid affinity. The data show that the host plasma membrane is a critical interface for effector-target interaction, and establish versatile systems to further dissect effector interplay.  相似文献   

8.
Salmonella Typhimurium causes bacterial enterocolitis. The type III secretion system (TTSS)-1 is a key virulence determinant of S. Typhimurium mediating host cell invasion and acute enterocolitis. The TTSS-1 effector protein SipA is transported into host cells, accumulates in characteristic foci at the bacteria-host cell interface, manipulates signalling and affects virulence. Two functional domains of SipA have previously been characterized: The N-terminal SipA region (amino acids 1-105) mediates TTSS-1 transport and the C-terminal SipA 'actin-binding' domain (ABD; amino acids 446-685) manipulates F-actin assembly. Little is known about the central region of SipA. In a deletion analysis we found that the central SipA region harbours two distinct functional domains, F1 and F2. They are involved in SipA focus formation and host manipulation. The F1 domain (amino acids 170-271) drives SipA focus formation and domain F2 (amino acids 280-394) enhances this process by mediating SipA-SipA interactions. SipA variants lacking the F1-, the F2- or the actin binding domain were attenuated in virulence assays, namely host cell invasion and/or virulence in a mouse model for enterocolitis. Our results show that the newly identified SipA domains have distinct functions. Nevertheless, cooperation between the SipA domains F1, F2 and ABD is required to promote Salmonella virulence.  相似文献   

9.
鼠伤寒沙门菌表达两个不同的Ⅲ型分泌系统(typeⅢsecretion/translocation systems, TTSS),分别由致病岛1和2(pathogenicityi slands 1 and 2, SPI-1 and SPI-2)编码。细菌依赖TTSS将效应蛋白转运至宿主细胞,通过“触发”机制诱导细菌进入宿主细胞。这些效应蛋白可诱导细胞骨架重排,导致“巨吞饮”,促使细菌入侵。本综述依据多种沙门菌效应蛋白的功能,建立沙门菌侵袭模型。TTSS活化并转运效应蛋白进入宿主细胞发挥功能(Ⅰ)。小G蛋白交换因子SopE和肌醇磷酸酯酶SopB通过激活CDC42和Rac1,诱导内陷相关的蛋白聚集(Ⅱ)。SipA和SipC通过降低肌动蛋白临界浓度、刺激网素成束、稳定纤维状肌动蛋白(fibrousactin, F-actin)以及使肌动蛋白核化等功能,促使细菌入侵(Ⅲ)。SopB可使膜内陷区PIP2的浓度降低以及VAMP8聚集,促使细胞膜分裂(Ⅳ)。这些效应蛋白的联合作用,使膜皱褶在局部向外显著延伸,使沙门菌被细胞内形成的特殊膜结构包裹。沙门菌的另一种效应蛋白SptP,通过刺激小G蛋白内源性GTPase的活性,抑制小G蛋白的活化,使细胞膜恢复至原有状态(Ⅴ)。  相似文献   

10.
Gu B  Kale SD  Wang Q  Wang D  Pan Q  Cao H  Meng Y  Kang Z  Tyler BM  Shan W 《PloS one》2011,6(11):e27217

Background

Effector proteins of biotrophic plant pathogenic fungi and oomycetes are delivered into host cells and play important roles in both disease development and disease resistance response. How obligate fungal pathogen effectors enter host cells is poorly understood. The Ps87 gene of Puccinia striiformis encodes a protein that is conserved in diverse fungal pathogens. Ps87 homologs from a clade containing rust fungi are predicted to be secreted. The aim of this study is to test whether Ps87 may act as an effector during Puccinia striiformis infection.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Yeast signal sequence trap assay showed that the rust protein Ps87 could be secreted from yeast cells, but a homolog from Magnaporthe oryzae that was not predicted to be secreted, could not. Cell re-entry and protein uptake assays showed that a region of Ps87 containing a conserved RXLR-like motif [K/R]RLTG was confirmed to be capable of delivering oomycete effector Avr1b into soybean leaf cells and carrying GFP into soybean root cells. Mutations in the Ps87 motif (KRLTG) abolished the protein translocation ability.

Conclusions/Significance

The results suggest that Ps87 and its secreted homologs could utilize similar protein translocation machinery as those of oomycete and other fungal pathogens. Ps87 did not show direct suppression activity on plant defense responses. These results suggest Ps87 may represent an “emerging effector” that has recently acquired the ability to enter plant cells but has not yet acquired the ability to alter host physiology.  相似文献   

11.

Background

The Vibrio parahaemolyticus type III secreted effector VopS contains a fic domain that covalently modifies Rho GTPase threonine with AMP to inhibit downstream signaling events in host cells. The VopS fic domain includes a conserved sequence motif (HPFx[D/E]GN[G/K]R) that contributes to AMPylation. Fic domains are found in a variety of species, including bacteria, a few archaea, and metazoan eukaryotes.

Methodology/Principal Findings

We show that the AMPylation activity extends to a eukaryotic fic domain in Drosophila melanogaster CG9523, and use sequence and structure based computational methods to identify related domains in doc toxins and the type III effector AvrB. The conserved sequence motif that contributes to AMPylation unites fic with doc. Although AvrB lacks this motif, its structure reveals a similar topology to the fic and doc folds. AvrB binds to a peptide fragment of its host virulence target in a similar manner as fic binds peptide substrate. AvrB also orients a phosphate group from a bound ADP ligand near the peptide-binding site and in a similar position as a bound fic phosphate.

Conclusions/Significance

The demonstrated eukaryotic fic domain AMPylation activity suggests that the VopS effector has exploited a novel host posttranslational modification. Fic domain-related structures give insight to the AMPylation active site and to the VopS fic domain interaction with its host GTPase target. These results suggest that fic, doc, and AvrB stem from a common ancestor that has evolved to AMPylate protein substrates.  相似文献   

12.
13.

Background

Plants have two related immune systems to defend themselves against pathogen attack. Initially, pattern-triggered immunity is activated upon recognition of microbe-associated molecular patterns by pattern recognition receptors. Pathogenic bacteria deliver effector proteins into the plant cell that interfere with this immune response and promote disease. However, some plants express resistance proteins that detect the presence of specific effectors leading to a robust defense response referred to as effector-triggered immunity. The interaction of tomato with Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato is an established model system for understanding the molecular basis of these plant immune responses.

Results

We apply high-throughput RNA sequencing to this pathosystem to identify genes whose expression changes specifically during pattern-triggered or effector-triggered immunity. We then develop reporter genes for each of these responses that will enable characterization of the host response to the large collection of P. s. pv. tomato strains that express different combinations of effectors. Virus-induced gene silencing of 30 of the effector-triggered immunity-specific genes identifies Epk1 which encodes a predicted protein kinase from a family previously unknown to be involved in immunity. Knocked-down expression of Epk1 compromises effector-triggered immunity triggered by three bacterial effectors but not by effectors from non-bacterial pathogens. Epistasis experiments indicate that Epk1 acts upstream of effector-triggered immunity-associated MAP kinase signaling.

Conclusions

Using RNA-seq technology we identify genes involved in specific immune responses. A functional genomics screen led to the discovery of Epk1, a novel predicted protein kinase required for plant defense activation upon recognition of three different bacterial effectors.

Electronic supplementary material

The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13059-014-0492-1) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

14.
15.

Background

The white mold fungus Sclerotinia sclerotiorum is a devastating necrotrophic plant pathogen with a remarkably broad host range. The interaction of necrotrophs with their hosts is more complex than initially thought, and still poorly understood.

Results

We combined bioinformatics approaches to determine the repertoire of S. sclerotiorum effector candidates and conducted detailed sequence and expression analyses on selected candidates. We identified 486 S. sclerotiorum secreted protein genes expressed in planta, many of which have no predicted enzymatic activity and may be involved in the interaction between the fungus and its hosts. We focused on those showing (i) protein domains and motifs found in known fungal effectors, (ii) signatures of positive selection, (iii) recent gene duplication, or (iv) being S. sclerotiorum-specific. We identified 78 effector candidates based on these properties. We analyzed the expression pattern of 16 representative effector candidate genes on four host plants and revealed diverse expression patterns.

Conclusions

These results reveal diverse predicted functions and expression patterns in the repertoire of S. sclerotiorum effector candidates. They will facilitate the functional analysis of fungal pathogenicity determinants and should prove useful in the search for plant quantitative disease resistance components active against the white mold.

Electronic supplementary material

The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1471-2164-15-336) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

16.
Xi C  Wu J 《PloS one》2010,5(10):e13355

Background

Signaling by extracellular adenosine 5′-triphosphase (eATP) is very common for cell-to-cell communication in many basic patho-physiological development processes. Rapid release of ATP into the extracellular environment from distressed or injured eukaryotic cells due to pathogens or other etiological factors can serve as a “danger signal”, activating host innate immunity. However, little is known about how or whether pathogenic bacteria respond to this “danger signal”.

Methods and Principal Findings

Here we report that extracellular dATP/ATP can stimulate bacterial adhesion and biofilm formation via increased cell lysis and extracellular DNA (eDNA) release. We demonstrate that extracellular dATP/ATP also stimulates bacterial adherence in vitro to human bronchial epithelial cells.

Conclusions and Significance

These data suggest that bacteria may sense extracellular dATP/ATP as a signal of “danger” and form biofilms to protect them from host innate immunity. This study reveals a very important and unrecognized phenomenon that both bacteria and host cells could respond to a common important signal molecule in a race to adapt to the presence of one another. We propose that extracellular dATP/ATP functions as an “inter-domain” warning signal that serves to induce protective measures in both Bacterial and Eukaryotic cells.  相似文献   

17.
Kubori T  Galán JE 《Cell》2003,115(3):333-342
Salmonella enterica invasion of host cells requires the reversible activation of the Rho-family GTPases Cdc42 and Rac1 by the bacterially encoded GEF SopE and the GAP SptP, which exert their function at different times during infection and are delivered into host cells by a type III secretion system. We found that SopE and SptP are delivered in equivalent amounts early during infection. However, SopE is rapidly degraded through a proteosome-mediated pathway, while SptP exhibits much slower degradation kinetics. The half-lives of these effector proteins are determined by their secretion and translocation domains. Chimeric protein analysis indicated that delivery of SptP into host cells by the SopE secretion and translocation domain drastically shortened its half-life. Conversely, delivery of SopE by the SptP secretion and translocation signals significantly increased its half-life, resulting in persistent actin cytoskeleton rearrangements. This regulatory mechanism constitutes a remarkable example of a pathogen's adaptation to modulate cellular functions.  相似文献   

18.
19.

Background

A test for diagnosis of active Tuberculosis (TB) from peripheral blood could tremendously improve clinical management of patients.

Methods

Of 178 prospectively enrolled patients with possible TB, 60 patients were diagnosed with pulmonary and 27 patients with extrapulmonary TB. The frequencies of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB) specific CD4+ T cells and CD8+ T cells producing cytokines were assessed using overnight stimulation with purified protein derivate (PPD) or early secretory antigenic target (ESAT)-6, respectively.

Results

Among patients with active TB, an increased type 1 cytokine profile consisting of mainly CD4+ T cell derived interferon (IFN)-γ was detectable. Despite contributing to the cytokine profile as a whole, the independent diagnostic performance of one cytokine producing T cells as well as polyfunctional T cells was poor. IFN-γ/Interleukin(IL)-2 cytokine ratios discriminated best between active TB and other diseases.

Conclusion

T cells producing one cytokine and polyfunctional T cells have a limited role in diagnosis of active TB. The significant shift from a “memory type” to an “effector type” cytokine profile may be useful for further development of a rapid immune-diagnostic tool for active TB.  相似文献   

20.
Bacterial pathogens often harbour a type III secretion system (TTSS) that injects effector proteins into eukaryotic cells to manipulate host processes and cause diseases. Identification of host targets of bacterial effectors and revealing their mechanism of actions are crucial for understating bacterial virulence. We show that EspH, a type III effector conserved in enteric bacterial pathogens including enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC), enterohaemorrhagic E. coli and Citrobacter rodentium, markedly disrupts actin cytoskeleton structure and induces cell rounding up when ectopically expressed or delivered into HeLa cells by the bacterial TTSS. EspH inactivates host Rho GTPase signalling pathway at the level of RhoGEF. EspH directly binds the DH‐PH domain in multiple RhoGEFs, which prevents their binding to Rho and thereby inhibits nucleotide exchange‐mediated Rho activation. Consistently, infection of mouse macrophages with EPEC harbouring EspH attenuates phagocytosis of the bacteria as well as FcγR‐mediated phagocytosis. EspH represents the first example of targeting RhoGEFs by bacterial effectors, and our results also reveal an unprecedented mechanism used by enteric pathogens to counteract the host defence system.  相似文献   

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