Thioredoxin 1 Participates in the Activity of the Salmonella enterica Serovar Typhimurium Pathogenicity Island 2 Type III Secretion System |
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Authors: | Aurel Negrea Eva Bjur Speranta Puiac Sofia Eriksson Ygberg Fredrik ?slund Mikael Rhen |
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Affiliation: | Department of Microbiology, Tumor and Cell Biology, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm 17177, Sweden,1. McGill University, Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Montreal H3A2B4, Canada,2. Swedish Center for Infectious Disease Control, Solna 17182, Sweden,3. European Patent Office, The Hague 2288, The Netherlands4. |
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Abstract: | ![]() The facultative intracellular pathogen Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium relies on its Salmonella pathogenicity island 2 (SPI2) type III secretion system (T3SS) for intracellular replication and virulence. We report that the oxidoreductase thioredoxin 1 (TrxA) and SPI2 are coinduced for expression under in vitro conditions that mimic an intravacuolar environment, that TrxA is needed for proper SPI2 activity under these conditions, and that TrxA is indispensable for SPI2 activity in both phagocytic and epithelial cells. Infection experiments in mice demonstrated that SPI2 strongly contributed to virulence in a TrxA-proficient background whereas SPI2 did not affect virulence in a trxA mutant. Complementation analyses using wild-type trxA or a genetically engineered trxA coding for noncatalytic TrxA showed that the catalytic activity of TrxA is essential for SPI2 activity in phagocytic cells whereas a noncatalytic variant of TrxA partially sustained SPI2 activity in epithelial cells and virulence in mice. These results show that TrxA is needed for the intracellular induction of SPI2 and provide new insights into the functional integration between catalytic and noncatalytic activities of TrxA and a bacterial T3SS in different settings of intracellular infections.In Escherichia coli, thioredoxin 1 (TrxA, encoded by trxA) is an evolutionary conserved 11-kDa cytosolic highly potent reductase that supports the activities of various oxidoreductases and ribonucleotide reductases (1, 29) and interacts with a number of additional cytoplasmic proteins through the formation of temporary covalent intermolecular disulphide bonds (32). Consequently, as trxA mutants of E. coli (51), Helicobacter pylori (13), and Rhodobacter sphaeroides (34) show increased sensitivity to hydrogen peroxide, TrxA has been defined as a significant oxidoprotectant. In addition, TrxA possess a protein chaperone function that is disconnected from cysteine interactions (30, 32).Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium is closely related to E. coli. During divergent evolution, the Salmonella genome acquired a number of virulence-associated genes (20). Many of these genes are clustered on genetic regions termed Salmonella pathogenicity islands (or SPIs). Of these, SPI1 and SPI2 code for separate type III secretion systems (T3SSs). T3SSs are supramolecular virulence-associated machineries that, in several pathogenic gram-negative bacterial species, enable injection of effector proteins from the bacteria into host cells (22, 57). The effector proteins, in turn, manipulate intrinsic host cell functions to facilitate the infection.The SPI1 T3SS of S. serovar Typhimurium is activated for expression in the intestine in response to increased osmolarity and decreased oxygen tension (22, 57). SPI1 effector proteins are primarily secreted into cells that constitute the epithelial layer and interfere with host cell Cdc42 and Rac-1 signaling and actin polymerization. This enables the bacteria to orchestrate their own actin-dependent uptake into nonphagocytic cells (57). SPI1 effector proteins also induce inflammatory signaling and release of interleukin-1β from infected cells (25, 26).Subsequent systemic progression of S. serovar Typhimurium from the intestinal tissue relies heavily on an ability to survive and replicate in phagocytic cells (18, 46, 53, 54). S. serovar Typhimurium uses an additional set of effector proteins secreted by the SPI2 T3SS for replication inside host cells and for coping with phagocyte innate responses to the infection (10, 11, 54). The functions of SPI2 effectors include diversion of vesicular trafficking, induction of apoptotic responses, and manipulation of ubiquitination of host proteins (28, 40, 45, 53). Hence, SPI2 effector proteins create a vacuolar environment that sustains intracellular replication of S. serovar Typhimurium (28).In addition to pathogenicity islands, the in vivo fitness of Salmonella spp. relies on selected functions shared with other enterobacteria. Thus, many virulence genes are integrated into “housekeeping” gene regulatory networks, coded for by a core genome, which steer bacterial stress responses (12, 17, 27, 55). Selected anabolic pathways also contribute to virulence of S. serovar Typhimurium (18, 27), evidently by providing biochemical building blocks for bacterial replication (36).In S. serovar Typhimurium, TrxA is a housekeeping protein that strongly contributes to virulence in cell culture and mouse infection models (8). However, the mechanism by which TrxA activity adds to virulence has not been defined. Here we show that the contribution of TrxA to virulence of S. serovar Typhimurium associates with its functional integration with the SPI2 T3SS under conditions that prevail in the intracellular vacuolar compartment of the host cell. These findings ascribe a novel role to TrxA in bridging environmental adaptations with virulence gene expression and illuminate a new aspect of the interaction between evolutionary conserved and horizontally acquired gene functions in bacteria. |
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