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Legionella species are ubiquitous, waterborne bacteria that thrive in numerous ecological niches. Yet, in contrast to many other environmental bacteria, Legionella spp. are also able to grow intracellularly in predatory protozoa. This feature mainly accounts for the pathogenicity of Legionella pneumophila, which causes the majority of clinical cases of a severe pneumonia termed Legionnaires' disease. The pathomechanism underlying L. pneumophila infection is based on macrophage resistance, which in turn is largely defined by the opportunistic pathogen's resistance towards amoebae. L. pneumophila replicates in macrophages or amoebae in a unique membrane‐bound compartment, the Legionella‐containing vacuole (LCV). LCV formation requires the bacterial intracellular multiplication/defective for organelle trafficking (Icm/Dot) type IV secretion system and involves a plethora of translocated effector proteins, which subvert pivotal processes in the host cell. Of the ca. 300 different experimentally validated Icm/Dot substrates, about 50 have been studied and attributed a cellular function to date. The versatility and ingenuity of these effectors' mode of actions is striking. In this review, we summarize insight into the cellular functions and biochemical activities of well‐characterized L. pneumophila effector proteins and the host pathways they target. Recent studies not only substantially increased our knowledge about pathogen–host interactions, but also shed light on novel biological mechanisms.  相似文献   

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The severe pneumonia known as Legionnaires' disease occurs following infection by the Gram‐negative bacterium Legionella pneumophila. Normally resident in fresh‐water sources, Legionella are subject to predation by eukaryotic phagocytes such as amoeba and ciliates. To counter this, L. pneumophila has evolved a complex system of effector proteins which allow the bacteria to hijack the phagocytic vacuole, hiding and replicating within their erstwhile killers. These same mechanisms allow L. pneumophila to hijack another phagocyte, lung‐based macrophages, which thus avoids a vital part of the immune system and leads to infection. The course of infection can be divided into five main categories: pathogen uptake, formation of the replication‐permissive vacuole, intracellular replication, host cell response, and bacterial exit. L. pneumophila effector proteins target every stage of this process, interacting with secretory, endosomal, lysosomal, retrograde and autophagy pathways, as well as with mitochondria. Each of these steps can be studied in protozoa or mammalian cells, and the knowledge gained can be readily applied to human pathogenicity. Here we describe the manner whereby L. pneumophila infects host protozoa, the various techniques which are available to analyse these processes and the implications of this model for Legionella virulence and the pathogenesis of Legionnaires' disease.  相似文献   

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Upon infection, Legionella pneumophila uses the Dot/Icm type IV secretion system to translocate effector proteins from the Legionella‐containing vacuole (LCV) into the host cell cytoplasm. The effectors target a wide array of host cellular processes that aid LCV biogenesis, including the manipulation of membrane trafficking. In this study, we used a hidden Markov model screen to identify two novel, non‐eukaryotic s oluble N SF a ttachment protein re ceptor (SNARE) homologs: the bacterial Legionella SNARE effector A (LseA) and viral SNARE homolog A proteins. We characterized LseA as a Dot/Icm effector of L. pneumophila, which has close homology to the Qc‐SNARE subfamily. The lseA gene was present in multiple sequenced L. pneumophila strains including Corby and was well distributed among L. pneumophila clinical and environmental isolates. Employing a variety of biochemical, cell biological and microbiological techniques, we found that farnesylated LseA localized to membranes associated with the Golgi complex in mammalian cells and LseA interacted with a subset of Qa‐, Qb‐ and R‐SNAREs in host cells. Our results suggested that LseA acts as a SNARE protein and has the potential to regulate or mediate membrane fusion events in Golgi‐associated pathways.  相似文献   

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The opportunistic pathogen Legionella pneumophila employs the Icm/Dot type IV secretion system and ~300 different effector proteins to replicate in macrophages and amoebae in a distinct ‘Legionella‐containing vacuole’ (LCV). LCVs from infected RAW 264.7 macrophages were enriched by immuno‐affinity separation and density gradient centrifugation, using an antibody against the L. pneumophila effector SidC, which specifically binds to the phosphoinositide PtdIns(4)P on the pathogen vacuole membrane. The proteome of purified LCVs was determined by mass spectro‐metry (data are available via ProteomeXchange with identifier PXD000647). The proteomics analysis revealed more than 1150 host proteins, including 13 small GTPases of the Rab family. Using fluorescence microscopy, 6 novel Rab proteins were confirmed to localize on pathogen vacuoles harbouring wild‐type but not ΔicmT mutant L. pneumophila. Individual depletion of 20 GTPases by RNA interference indicated that endocytic GTPases (Rab5a, Rab14 and Rab21) restrict intracellular growth of L. pneumophila, whereas secretory GTPases (Rab8a, Rab10 and Rab32) implicated in Golgi‐endosome trafficking promote bacterial replication. Upon silencing of Rab21 or Rab32, fewer LCVs stained positive for Rab4 or Rab9, implicated in secretory or retrograde trafficking respectively. Moreover, depletion of Rab8a, Rab14 or Rab21 significantly decreased the number of SidC‐positive LCVs, suggesting that PtdIns(4)P is reduced under these conditions. L. pneumophila proteins identified in purified LCVs included proteins putatively implicated in phosphorus metabolism and as many as 60 Icm/Dot‐translocated effectors, which are likely required early during infection. Taken together, the phagocyte and Legionella proteomes of purified LCVs lay the foundation for further hypothesis‐driven investigations of the complex process of pathogen vacuole formation.  相似文献   

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The formation and release of outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) is a phenomenon observed in many bacteria, including Legionella pneumophila. During infection, this human pathogen primarily invades alveolar macrophages and replicates within a unique membrane‐bound compartment termed Legionella‐containing vacuole. In the current study, we analysed the membrane architecture of L. pneumophila OMVs by small‐angle X‐ray scattering and biophysically characterized OMV membranes. We investigated the interaction of L. pneumophila OMVs with model membranes by Förster resonance energy transfer and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. These experiments demonstrated the incorporation of OMV membrane material into liposomes composed of different eukaryotic phospholipids, revealing an endogenous property of OMVs to fuse with eukaryotic membranes. Cellular co‐incubation experiments showed a dose‐ and time‐dependent binding of fluorophore‐labelled OMVs to macrophages. Trypan blue quenching experiments disclosed a rapid internalization of OMVs into macrophages at 37 and 4°C. Purified OMVs induced tumour necrosis factor‐α production in human macrophages at concentrations starting at 300 ng ml?1. Experiments on HEK293‐TLR2 and TLR4/MD‐2 cell lines demonstrated a dominance of TLR2‐dependent signalling pathways. In summary, we demonstrate binding, internalization and biological activity of L. pneumophila OMVs on human macrophages. Our data support OMV membrane fusion as a mechanism for the remote delivery of virulence factors to host cells.  相似文献   

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The NarX–NarL and NarQ–NarP sensor–response regulator pairs control Escherichia coli gene expression in response to nitrate and nitrite. Previous analysis suggests that the Nar two‐component systems form a cross‐regulation network in vivo. Here we report on the kinetics of phosphoryl transfer between different sensor–regulator combinations in vitro. NarX exhibited a noticeable kinetic preference for NarL over NarP, whereas NarQ exhibited a relatively slight kinetic preference for NarL. These findings were substantiated in reactions containing one sensor and both response regulators, or with two sensors and a single response regulator. We isolated 21 NarX mutants with missense substitutions in the cytoplasmic central and transmitter modules. These confer phenotypes that reflect defects in phospho‐NarL dephosphorylation. Five of these mutants, all with substitutions in the transmitter DHp domain, also exhibited NarP‐blind phenotypes. Phosphoryl transfer assays in vitro confirmed that these NarX mutants have defects in catalysing NarP phosphorylation. By contrast, the corresponding NarQ mutants conferred phenotypes indicating comparable interactions with both NarP and NarL. Our overall results reveal asymmetry in the Nar cross‐regulation network, such that NarQ interacts similarly with both response regulators, whereas NarX interacts preferentially with NarL.  相似文献   

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Background  

Quorum sensing is a form of cell-to-cell communication that allows bacteria to control a wide range of physiological processes in a population density-dependent manner. Production of peptide antibiotics is one of the processes regulated by quorum sensing in several species of Gram-positive bacteria, including strains of Carnobacterium maltaromaticum. This bacterium and its peptide antibiotics are of interest due to their potential applications in food preservation. The molecular bases of the quorum sensing phenomenon controlling peptide antibiotic production in C. maltaromaticum remain poorly understood. The present study was aimed at gaining a deeper insight into the molecular mechanism involved in quorum sensing-mediated regulation of peptide antibiotic (bacteriocin) production by C. maltaromaticum. We report the functional analyses of the CS (autoinducer)-CbnK (histidine protein kinase)-CbnR (response regulator) three-component regulatory system and the three regulated promoters involved in peptide antibiotic production in C. maltaromaticum LV17B.  相似文献   

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The Gram‐negative bacterium Legionella pneumophila is the causative agent of Legionnaires'' disease and replicates in amoebae and macrophages within a distinct compartment, the Legionella‐containing vacuole (LCV). The facultative intracellular pathogen switches between a replicative, non‐virulent and a non‐replicating, virulent/transmissive phase. Here, we show on a single‐cell level that at late stages of infection, individual motile (PflaA‐GFP‐positive) and virulent (PralF‐ and PsidC‐GFP‐positive) L. pneumophila emerge in the cluster of non‐growing bacteria within an LCV. Comparative proteomics of PflaA‐GFP‐positive and PflaA‐GFP‐negative L. pneumophila subpopulations reveals distinct proteomes with flagellar proteins or cell division proteins being preferentially produced by the former or the latter, respectively. Toward the end of an infection cycle (˜ 48 h), the PflaA‐GFP‐positive L. pneumophila subpopulation emerges at the cluster periphery, predominantly escapes the LCV, and spreads from the bursting host cell. These processes are mediated by the Legionella quorum sensing (Lqs) system. Thus, quorum sensing regulates the emergence of a subpopulation of transmissive L. pneumophila at the LCV periphery, and phenotypic heterogeneity underlies the intravacuolar bi‐phasic life cycle of L. pneumophila.  相似文献   

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The cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 harbours 47 histidine kinases (Hiks). Among these are hybrid histidine kinases with one or two response regulator domains as well as numerous Hiks with several sensory domains. One example is the hybrid histidine kinase Slr1759 (Hik14) that has two PAS domains arranged in tandem linked to a predicted GAF domain. Here, we show that a Slr1759 derivative recombinantly expressed in Escherichia coli has a flavin cofactor. Using truncated Slr1759 variants, it is shown that the flavin associates with the first PAS domain. The cofactor reconstitutes the activity of d-amino acid oxidase apoprotein from pig kidney, indicating that the flavin derivative is FAD. Furthermore, the Slr1759 histidine kinase domain indeed undergoes autophosphorylation in vitro. The phosphorylated product of a recombinant Slr1759 derivative is sensitive to acids, pointing to a histidine residue as the phosphate-accepting group.  相似文献   

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The environmental bacterium Legionella pneumophila causes a severe pneumonia termed Legionnaires' disease. L. pneumophila employs a conserved mechanism to replicate within a specific vacuole in macrophages or protozoa such as the social soil amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum. Pathogen–host interactions depend on the Icm/Dot type IV secretion system (T4SS), which translocates approximately 300 different effector proteins into host cells. Here we analyse the effects of L. pneumophila on migration and chemotaxis of amoebae, macrophages or polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMN). Using under‐agarose assays, L. pneumophila inhibited in a dose‐ and T4SS‐dependent manner the migration of D. discoideum towards folate as well as starvation‐induced aggregation of the social amoebae. Similarly, L. pneumophila impaired migration of murine RAW 264.7 macrophages towards the cytokines CCL5 and TNFα, or of primary human PMN towards the peptide fMLP respectively. L. pneumophila lacking the T4SS‐translocated activator of the small eukaryotic GTPase Ran, Lpg1976/LegG1, hyper‐inhibited the migration of D. discoideum, macrophages or PMN. The phenotype was reverted by plasmid‐encoded LegG1 to an extent observed for mutant bacteria lacking a functional Icm/Dot T4SS.Similarly, LegG1 promoted random migration of L. pneumophila‐infected macrophages and A549 epithelial cells in a Ran‐dependent manner, or upon ‘microbial microinjection’ into HeLa cells by a Yersinia strain lacking endogenous effectors. Single‐cell tracking and real‐time analysis of L. pneumophila‐infected phagocytes revealed that the velocity and directionality of the cells were decreased, and cell motility as well as microtubule dynamics was impaired. Taken together, these findings indicate that the L. pneumophila Ran activator LegG1 and consequent microtubule polymerization are implicated in Icm/Dot‐dependent inhibition of phagocyte migration.  相似文献   

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Quorum sensing is a process of bacterial cell–cell communication that relies on the production, release and receptor‐driven detection of extracellular signal molecules called autoinducers. The quorum‐sensing bacterium Vibrio harveyi exclusively detects the autoinducer N‐((R)‐3‐hydroxybutanoyl)‐L‐homoserine lactone (3OH‐C4 HSL) via the two‐component receptor LuxN. To discover the principles underlying the exquisite selectivity LuxN has for its ligand, we identified LuxN mutants with altered specificity. LuxN uses three mechanisms to verify that the bound molecule is the correct ligand: in the context of the overall ligand‐binding site, His210 validates the C3 modification, Leu166 surveys the chain‐length and a strong steady‐state kinase bias imposes an energetic hurdle for inappropriate ligands to elicit signal transduction. Affinities for the LuxN kinase on and kinase off states underpin whether a ligand will act as an antagonist or an agonist. Mutations that bias LuxN to the agonized, kinase off, state are clustered in a region adjacent to the ligand‐binding site, suggesting that this region acts as the switch that triggers signal transduction. Together, our analyses illuminate how a histidine sensor kinase differentiates between ligands and exploits those differences to regulate its signaling activity.  相似文献   

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Bacteria communicate using secreted chemical signaling molecules called autoinducers in a process known as quorum sensing. The quorum‐sensing network of the marine bacterium Vibrio harveyi uses three autoinducers, each known to encode distinct ecological information. Yet how cells integrate and interpret the information contained within these three autoinducer signals remains a mystery. Here, we develop a new framework for analyzing signal integration on the basis of information theory and use it to analyze quorum sensing in V. harveyi. We quantify how much the cells can learn about individual autoinducers and explain the experimentally observed input–output relation of the V. harveyi quorum‐sensing circuit. Our results suggest that the need to limit interference between input signals places strong constraints on the architecture of bacterial signal‐integration networks, and that bacteria probably have evolved active strategies for minimizing this interference. Here, we analyze two such strategies: manipulation of autoinducer production and feedback on receptor number ratios.  相似文献   

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Vibrio harveyi regulates the expression of bioluminescence (lux) in response to cell density, a phenomenon known as quorum sensing. In V. harveyi, two independent quorum-sensing systems exist, and each produces, detects, and responds to a specific cell density-dependent autoinducer signal. The autoinducers are recognized by two-component hybrid sensor kinases called LuxN and LuxQ, and sensory information from both systems is transduced by a phosphorelay mechanism to the response regulator protein LuxO. Genetic evidence suggests that LuxO-phosphate negatively regulates the expression of luminescence at low cell density in the absence of autoinducers. At high cell density, interaction of the sensors with their cognate autoinducers results in dephosphorylation and inactivation of the LuxO repressor. In the present report, we show that LuxN and LuxQ channel sensory information to LuxO via a newly identified phosphorelay protein that we have named LuxU. LuxU shows sequence similarity to other described phosphorelay proteins, including BvgS, ArcB, and Ypd1. A critical His residue (His 58) of LuxU is required for phosphorelay function.  相似文献   

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CK1 constitutes a protein kinase subfamily that is involved in many important physiological processes. However, there is limited knowledge about mechanisms that regulate their activity. Isoforms CK1δ and CK1ε were previously shown to autophosphorylate carboxy‐terminal sites, a process which effectively inhibits their catalytic activity. Mass spectrometry of CK1α and splice variant CK1αL has identified the autophosphorylation of the last four carboxyl‐end serines and threonines and also for CK1αS, the same four residues plus threonine‐327 and serine‐332 of the S insert. Autophosphorylation occurs while the recombinant proteins are expressed in Escherichia coli. Mutation of four carboxy‐terminal phosphorylation sites of CK1α to alanine demonstrates that these residues are the principal but not unique sites of autophosphorylation. Treatment of autophosphorylated CK1α and CK1αS with λ phosphatase causes an activation of 80–100% and 300%, respectively. Similar treatment fails to stimulate the CK1α mutants lacking autophosphorylation sites. Incubation of dephosphorylated enzymes with ATP to allow renewed autophosphorylation causes significant inhibition of CK1α and CK1αS. The substrate for these studies was a synthetic canonical peptide for CK1 (RRKDLHDDEEDEAMS*ITA). The stimulation of activity seen upon dephosphorylation of CK1α and CK1αS was also observed using the known CK1 protein substrates DARPP‐32, β‐catenin, and CK2β, which have different CK1 recognition sequences. Autophosphorylation effects on CK1α activity are not due to changes in Kmapp for ATP or for peptide substrate but rather to the catalytic efficiency per pmol of enzyme. This work demonstrates that CK1α and its splice variants can be regulated by their autophosphorylation status. J. Cell. Biochem. 106: 399–408, 2009. © 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

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