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Adherence of pathogenic Neisseria to target host cells is mediated by pili. PilC1 and PilC2 are two high-molecular-weight proteins involved in pilus assembly and cellular adherence functions of the pili. Inactivation of pilC1 or pilC2 in N. meningitidis resulted in clones that expressed the same number of pili as the parent, contained no alterations in pilE and showed no detectable differences in PilE glycosylation. However, the PilC2+ pilC1- mutant showed much reduced adherence to target cells, indicating that production of PilC1 is essential for pilus-mediated adherence. To study further the functional differences between the meningococcal pilC genes, we determined the complete nucleotide sequence of pilC1 and pilC2 of N. meningitidis. Alignment of six PilC sequences demonstrated that PilC is composed of both conserved and variable regions. By immunogold labelling of bacterial sections we showed that PilC is present in the membranes of both piliated and non-piliated bacteria. Further, we demonstrated that PilC is associated with the bacterial cell surface.  相似文献   

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Type 4 pili produced by the pathogenic Neisseria species constitute primary determinants for the adherence to host tissues. In addition to the major pilin subunit (PilE), neisserial pili contain the variable PilC proteins represented by two variant gene copies in most pathogenic Neisseria isolates. Based upon structural differences in the conserved regions of PilE, two pilus classes can be distinguished in Neisseria meningitidis . For class I pili found in both Neisseria gonorrhoeae and N. meningitidis , PilC proteins have been implicated in pilus assembly, natural transformation competence and adherence to epithelial cells. In this study, we used primers specific for the pilC2 gene of N. gonorrhoeae strain MS11 to amplify, by the polymerase chain reaction, and clone a homologous pilC gene from N. meningitidis strain A1493 which produces class II pili. This gene was sequenced and the deduced amino acid sequence showed 75.4% and 73.8% identity with the gonococcal PilC1 and PilC2, respectively. These values match the identity value of 74.1% calculated for the two N. gonorrhoeae MS11 PilC proteins, indicating a horizontal relationship between the N. gonorrhoeae and N. meningitidis pilC genes. We provide evidence that PilC functions in meningococcal class II pilus assembly and adherence. Furthermore, expression of the cloned N. meningitidis pilC gene in a gonococcal pilC1,2 mutant restores pilus assembly, adherence to ME-180 epithelial cells, and transformation competence to the wild-type level. Thus, PilC proteins exhibit indistinguishable functions in the context of class I and class II pili.  相似文献   

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Neisseria meningitidis is a strictly human pathogen that has two facets since asymptomatic carriage can unpredictably turn into fulminant forms of infection. Meningococcal pathogenesis relies on the ability of the bacteria to break host epithelial or endothelial cellular barriers. Highly restrictive, yet poorly understood, mechanisms allow meningococcal adhesion to cells of only human origin. Adhesion of encapsulated and virulent meningococci to human cells relies on the expression of bacterial type four pili (T4P) that trigger intense host cell signalling. Among the components of the meningococcal T4P, the concomitantly expressed PilC1 and PilC2 proteins regulate pili exposure at the bacterial surface, and until now, PilC1 was believed to be specifically responsible for T4P-mediated meningococcal adhesion to human cells. Contrary to previous reports, we show that, like PilC1, the meningococcal PilC2 component is capable of mediating adhesion to human ME180 epithelial cells, with cortical plaque formation and F-actin condensation. However, PilC1 and PilC2 promote different effects on infected cells. Cellular tracking analysis revealed that PilC1-expressing meningococci caused a severe reduction in the motility of infected cells, which was not the case when cells were infected with PilC2-expressing strains. The amount of both total and phosphorylated forms of EGFR was dramatically reduced in cells upon PilC1-mediated infection. In contrast, PilC2-mediated infection did not notably affect the EGFR pathway, and these specificities were shared among unrelated meningococcal strains. These results suggest that meningococci have evolved a highly discriminative tool for differential adhesion in specific microenvironments where different cell types are present. Moreover, the fine-tuning of cellular control through the combined action of two concomitantly expressed, but distinctly regulated, T4P-associated variants of the same molecule (i.e. PilC1 and PilC2) brings a new model to light for the analysis of the interplay between pathogenic bacteria and human host cells.  相似文献   

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The gram-negative bacterium Kingella kingae is a leading cause of osteoarticular infections in young children and initiates infection by colonizing the oropharynx. Adherence to respiratory epithelial cells represents an initial step in the process of K. kingae colonization and is mediated in part by type IV pili. In previous work, we observed that elimination of the K. kingae PilC1 and PilC2 pilus-associated proteins resulted in non-piliated organisms that were non-adherent, suggesting that PilC1 and PilC2 have a role in pilus biogenesis. To further define the functions of PilC1 and PilC2, in this study we eliminated the PilT retraction ATPase in the ΔpilC1ΔpilC2 mutant, thereby blocking pilus retraction and restoring piliation. The resulting strain was non-adherent in assays with cultured epithelial cells, supporting the possibility that PilC1 and PilC2 have adhesive activity. Consistent with this conclusion, purified PilC1 and PilC2 were capable of saturable binding to epithelial cells. Additional analysis revealed that PilC1 but not PilC2 also mediated adherence to selected extracellular matrix proteins, underscoring the differential binding specificity of these adhesins. Examination of deletion constructs and purified PilC1 and PilC2 fragments localized adhesive activity to the N-terminal region of both PilC1 and PilC2. The deletion constructs also localized the twitching motility property to the N-terminal region of these proteins. In contrast, the deletion constructs established that the pilus biogenesis function of PilC1 and PilC2 resides in the C-terminal region of these proteins. Taken together, these results provide definitive evidence that PilC1 and PilC2 are adhesins and localize adhesive activity and twitching motility to the N-terminal domain and biogenesis to the C-terminal domain.  相似文献   

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The phase-variable PilC proteins of pathogenic Neisseria species have recently been implicated in both assembly and cellular adherence functions of the type 4 pili of these pathogens. We describe here the cloning of full-length pilC1 and pilC2 genes and the complete sequencing of the pilC2 gene of Neisseria gonorrhoeae MS11. Sequential inactivation of both genes by gene replacement in piliated (P+) variants of N. gonorrhoeae MS11 led initially to a non-piliated (P) phenotype; however, spontaneous P+ variants could be derived from some pilC1,2 double mutants which produced morphologically intact pili. Purified pili from pilC1,2 mutants revealed no detectable PilC protein. Instead, a novel protein about 70 kDa in size appeared in the pili preparations of P+ mutants; this protein exhibited no immunological cross-reactivity with PilC1 or PilC2. We propose that this novel factor replaces the function of PilC in pilus biogenesis. Using isogenic N. gonorrhoeae strains which produce identical PilE (pilin) proteins we demonstrate that pili associated with the 70 kDa protein do not confer gonococcal adherence to human epithelial cells, in contrast to pili assembled in the presence of PilC1 or PilC2.  相似文献   

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Pathogenic Neisseria express type IV pili (tfp), which have been shown to play a central role in the interactions of bacteria with their environment. The regulation of piliation thus constitutes a central element in bacterial life cycle. The PilC proteins are outer membrane-associated proteins that have a key role in tfp biogenesis since PilC-null mutants appear defective for fibre expression. Moreover, tfp are also subjected to retraction, which is under the control of the PilT nucleotide-binding protein. In this work, we bring evidence that fibre retraction involves the translocation of pilin subunits to the cytoplasmic membrane. Furthermore, by engineering meningococcal strains that harbour inducible pilC genes, and with the use of meningococcus-cell interaction as a model for the sequential observation of fibre expression and retraction, we show that the PilC proteins regulate PilT-mediated fibre retraction.  相似文献   

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Pili confer the initial ability of Neisseria gonorrhoeae to bind to epithelial cells. Pilin (PilE), the major pilus subunit, and a minor protein termed PilC, reportedly essential for pilus biogenesis, undergo intra-strain phase and structural variation. We demonstrate here that at least two different adherence properties are associated with the gonococcal pili: one is specific for erythrocytes, which is virtually unaffected by PilE variation, and another is specific for epithelial cells, and is modulated in response to the variation of PilE. Based on this finding, mutants of a recA- strain were selected that had lost the ability to bind to human cornea epithelial cells (A-) but retained the ability to form pili (P+) and to agglutinate human erythrocytes (H+). The adherence-negative mutants failed to produce detectable levels of PilC1 or PilC2 proteins, representing piIC phase variants generated in the absence of RecA. The A- pilC phase variants were indistinguishable from their A+ parents and spontaneous A+ revertants with regard to the amount of PilE produced and its electrophoretic mobility, the degrees of piliation and haemagglutination, and the pilE nucleotide sequence. These data demonstrate a central role for PilC in pilus-mediated adherence of N. gonorrhoeae to human epithelial cells and further indicate that neither PilC1 nor PilC2 is obligatory for the assembly of gonococcal pili.  相似文献   

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Pili prepared from Neisseria gonorrhoeae contain minor amounts of a 110 kd outer membrane protein denoted PilC. The corresponding gene exists in two copies, pilC1 and pilC2, in most strains of N.gonorrhoeae. In the piliated strain MS11(P+), only one of the genes, pilC2, was expressed. Inactivation of pilC2 by a mTnCm insertion resulted in a nonpiliated phenotype, while a mTnCm insertion in pilC1 had no effect on piliation. Expression of pilC was found to be controlled at the translational level by frameshift mutations in a run of G residues positioned in the region encoding the signal peptide. Nonpilated (P-), pilin expressing colony variants that did not express detectable levels of PilC were selected; all P+ backswitchers from these P-, PilC- clones were found to be PilC+. The structural gene for pilin, pilE, was sequenced and found to be identical in one P-, PilC- and P+, PilC+ pair. Most PilC- cells were completely bald whereas the PilC+ backswitcher had 10-40 pili per cell. Thus, a turn ON and turn OFF in the expression of PilC results in gonococcal pili phase variation. These results suggest that PilC is required for pilus assembly and/or translocation across the gonococcal outer membrane.  相似文献   

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The pili and outer membrane proteins of Neisseria meningitidis (meningococci) facilitate bacterial adhesion and invasion into host cells. In this context expression of meningococcal PilC1 protein has been reported to play a crucial role. Intracellular calcium mobilization has been implicated as an important signaling event during internalization of several bacterial pathogens. Here we employed time lapse calcium-imaging and demonstrated that PilC1 of meningococci triggered a significant increase in cytoplasmic calcium in human brain microvascular endothelial cells, whereas PilC1-deficient meningococci could not initiate this signaling process. The increase in cytosolic calcium in response to PilC1-expressing meningococci was due to efflux of calcium from host intracellular stores as demonstrated by using 2-APB, which inhibits the release of calcium from the endoplasmic reticulum. Moreover, pre-treatment of host cells with U73122 (phospholipase C inhibitor) abolished the cytosolic calcium increase caused by PilC1-expressing meningococci demonstrating that active phospholipase C (PLC) is required to induce calcium transients in host cells. Furthermore, the role of cytosolic calcium on meningococcal adherence and internalization was documented by gentamicin protection assay and double immunofluorescence (DIF) staining. Results indicated that chelation of intracellular calcium by using BAPTA-AM significantly impaired PilC1-mediated meningococcal adherence to and invasion into host endothelial cells. However, buffering of extracellular calcium by BAPTA or EGTA demonstrated no significant effect on meningococcal adherence to and invasion into host cells. Taken together, these results indicate that meningococci induce calcium release from intracellular stores of host endothelial cells via PilC1 and cytoplasmic calcium concentrations play a critical role during PilC1 mediated meningococcal adherence to and subsequent invasion into host endothelial cells.  相似文献   

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Interaction with host cells is essential in meningococcal pathogenesis especially at the blood-brain barrier. This step is likely to involve a common regulatory pathway allowing coordinate regulation of genes necessary for the interaction with endothelial cells. The analysis of the genomic sequence of Neisseria meningitidis Z2491 revealed the presence of many repeats. One of these, designated REP2, contains a -24/-12 type promoter and a ribosome binding site 5 to 13 bp before an ATG. In addition most of these REP2 sequences are located immediately upstream of an ORF. Among these REP2-associated genes are pilC1 and crgA, described as being involved in steps essential for the interaction of N. meningitidis with host cells. Furthermore, the REP2 sequences located upstream of pilC1 and crgA correspond to the previously identified promoters known to be induced during the initial localized adhesion of N. meningitidis with human cells. This characteristic led us to hypothesize that at least some of the REP2-associated genes were upregulated under the same circumstances as pilC1 and crgA. Quantitative PCR in real time demonstrated that the expression of 14 out of 16 REP2-associated genes were upregulated during the initial localized adhesion of N. meningitidis. Taken together, these data suggest that these repeats control a set of genes necessary for the efficient interaction of this pathogen with host cells. Subsequent mutational analysis was performed to address the role of these genes during meningococcus-cell interaction.  相似文献   

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Neisseria meningitidis is a human pathogen that causes septicemia and meningitis with high mortality. The disease progression is rapid and much remains unknown about the disease process. The understanding of disease development is crucial for development of novel therapeutic strategies and vaccines against meningococcal disease. The use of bioluminescent imaging combined with a mouse disease model allowed us to investigate the progression of meningococcal sepsis over time. Injection of bacteria in blood demonstrated waves of bacterial clearance and growth, which selected for Opa-expressing bacteria, indicating the importance of this bacterial protein. Further, N. meningitidis accumulated in the thyroid gland, while thyroid hormone T4 levels decreased. Bacteria reached the mucosal surfaces of the upper respiratory tract, which required expression of the meningococcal PilC1 adhesin. Surprisingly, PilC1 was dispensable for meningococcal growth in blood and for crossing of the blood-brain barrier, indicating that the major role of PilC1 is to interact with mucosal surfaces. This in vivo study reveals disease dynamics and organ targeting during meningococcal disease and presents a potent tool for further investigations of meningococcal pathogenesis and vaccines in vivo. This might lead to development of new strategies to improve the outcome of meningococcal disease in human patients.  相似文献   

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Functional implications of the expression of PilC proteins in meningococci   总被引:6,自引:2,他引:4  
Multiple forms of PilC were found in Neisseria meningitidis (Nm) strains isolated from the oropharynx, blood or cerebrospinal fluid expressing either Class I or Class II pili. PilC expression was observed less frequently in case as opposed to carrier isolates. Moreover, PilC and pili were not always co-expressed. Several heavily piliated strains had no detectable PilC protein as determined by Western blotting using an antiserum previously used to detect such proteins in adhesive variants (Nassif et al., 1994). Serogroup B strain MC58 produced large numbers of pili, but expressed barely detectable amounts of PilC. A clonal variant of this strain with increased expression of PilC concurrently exhibited increased adherence to Chang conjunctival epithelial cells and human umbilical vein endothelial cells (Huvecs), but with more rapid binding to the former. No alteration in pilin sequence occurred in this variant, suggesting the involvement of PilC in increased adhesion. A Pil- backswitcher isolated from the hyper-adherent variant was PilC+ but was non-adherent, indicating that any PilC adherence function requires pilus expression. Parental variant (low PilC) produced pili in bundles that were easily detached from the bacterial surface and were frequently associated with Huvec surfaces after bacteria had been sheared off, but pili infrequently replaced bacteria during infection with the PilC-expressing variant. The hyper-adherent variant, which appeared to produce morphologically distinct pilus bundles, was able to withstand considerable shearing force and remained firmly attached to Huvecs. This raises the possibility that the observed hyper-adherence may arise from better anchorage of pili to the bacterial surface in addition to increased adhesion to some host cell surfaces.  相似文献   

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Type IV pili are expressed from a wide variety of Gram‐negative bacteria and play a major role in host cell adhesion and bacterial motility. PilC is one of at least a dozen different proteins that are implicated in Type IV pilus assembly in Thermus thermophilus and a member of a conserved family of integral inner membrane proteins which are components of the Type II secretion system (GspF) and the archeal flagellum. PilC/GspF family members contain repeats of a conserved helix‐rich domain of around 100 residues in length. Here, we describe the crystal structure of one of these domains, derived from the N‐terminal domain of Thermus thermophilus PilC. The N‐domain forms a dimer, adopting a six helix bundle structure with an up‐down‐up‐down‐up‐down topology. The monomers are related by a rotation of 170°, followed by a translation along the axis of the final α‐helix of approximately one helical turn. This means that the regions of contact on helices 5 and 6 in each monomer are overlapping, but different. Contact between the two monomers is mediated by a network of hydrophobic residues which are highly conserved in PilC homologs from other Gram‐negative bacteria. Site‐directed mutagenesis of residues at the dimer interface resulted in a change in oligomeric state of PilC from tetramers to dimers, providing evidence that this interface is also found in the intact membrane protein and suggesting that it is important to its function. Proteins 2010. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

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Polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMNs) are important components of the human innate immune system and are rapidly recruited at the site of bacterial infection. Despite the effective phagocytic activity of PMNs, Neisseria gonorrhoeae infections are characterized by high survival within PMNs. We reveal a novel type IV pilus-mediated adherence of pathogenic Neisseria to the uropod (the rear) of polarized PMNs. The direct pilus-uropod interaction was visualized by scanning electron microscopy and total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy. We showed that N. meningitidis adhesion to the PMN uropod depended on both pilus-associated proteins PilC1 and PilC2, while N. gonorrhoeae adhesion did not. Bacterial adhesion elicited accumulation of the complement regulator CD46, but not I-domain-containing integrins, beneath the adherent bacterial microcolony. Electrographs and live-cell imaging of PMNs suggested that bacterial adherence to the uropod is followed by internalization into PMNs via the uropod. We also present data showing that pathogenic Neisseria can hitchhike on PMNs to hide from their phagocytic activity as well as to facilitate the spread of the pathogen through the epithelial cell layer.  相似文献   

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