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1.
Listeria monocytogenes grows in the host cytosol and uses the surface protein ActA to promote actin polymerisation and mediate actin‐based motility. ActA, along with two secreted bacterial phospholipases C, also mediates avoidance from autophagy, a degradative process that targets intracellular microbes. Although it is known that ActA prevents autophagic recognition of L. monocytogenes in epithelial cells by masking the bacterial surface with host factors, the relative roles of actin polymerisation and actin‐based motility in autophagy avoidance are unclear in macrophages. Using pharmacological inhibition of actin polymerisation and a collection of actA mutants, we found that actin polymerisation prevented the colocalisation of L. monocytogenes with polyubiquitin, the autophagy receptor p62, and the autophagy protein LC3 during macrophage infection. In addition, the ability of L. monocytogenes to stimulate actin polymerisation promoted autophagy avoidance and growth in macrophages in the absence of phospholipases C. Time‐lapse microscopy using green fluorescent protein‐LC3 macrophages and a probe for filamentous actin showed that bacteria undergoing actin‐based motility moved away from LC3‐positive membranes. Collectively, these results suggested that although actin polymerisation protects the bacterial surface from autophagic recognition, actin‐based motility allows escape of L. monocytogenes from autophagic membranes in the macrophage cytosol.  相似文献   

2.
《Autophagy》2013,9(1):132-133
Autophagy is a cell-autonomous mechanism of innate immunity that protects the cytosol against bacterial infection. Invasive bacteria, including Listeria monocytogenes, have thus evolved strategies to counteract a process that limits their intracellular growth. ActA is a surface protein produced by L. monocytogenes to polymerize actin and mediate intra- and intercellular movements, which plays a critical role in autophagy escape. We have recently investigated the role of another L. monocytogenes surface protein, the internalin InlK, in the infection process. We showed that in the cytosol of infected cells, InlK interacts with the Major Vault Protein (MVP), the main component of cytoplasmic ribonucleoprotein particles named vaults. Although MVP has been implicated in a variety of key cellular process, its role remains elusive. We demonstrated that L. monocytogenes is able, via InlK, to decorate its surface with MVP in order to escape autophagic recognition. Strikingly, this new strategy used by L. monocytogenes to avoid autophagy is independent of ActA, suggesting that InlK-MVP interactions and actin polymerization are two processes that favor in the same manner the infection process. Understanding the role of MVP may provide new insights into bacterial infection and autophagy.  相似文献   

3.
《Autophagy》2013,9(3):368-371
Autophagy restricts the growth of a variety of intracellular pathogens. However, cytosol-adapted pathogens have evolved ways to evade restriction by this innate immune mechanism. Listeria monocytogenes is a Gram-positive bacterial pathogen that utilizes a cholesterol-dependent pore-forming toxin, listeriolysin O (LLO), to escape from the phagosome. Autophagy targets L. monocytogenes in LLO-damaged phagosomes and also in the cytosol under some experimental conditions. However, this bacterium has evolved multiple mechanisms to evade restriction by autophagy, including actin-based motility in the cytosol and an as yet undefined mechanism mediated by bacterial phospholipases C’s (PLCs). A population of L. monocytogenes with inefficient LLO activity forms Spacious Listeria-containing Phagosomes (SLAPs), which are autophagosome-like compartments that do not mature, allowing slow bacterial growth within enlarged vesicles. SLAPs may represent a stalemate between bacterial LLO action and the host autophagy system, resulting in persistent infection.

Addendum to: Birmingham CL, Canadien V, Gouin E, Troy EB, Yoshimori T, Cossart P, Higgins DE, Brumell JH. Listeria monocytogenes evades killing by autophagy during colonization of host cells. Autophagy 2007; 3:442-51.andBirmingham CL, Canadien V, Kaniuk NA, Steinberg BE, Higgins DE, Brumell JH. Listeriolysin O allows Listeria monocytogenes replication in macrophage vacuoles. Nature 2008; 451:350-4.  相似文献   

4.
《Autophagy》2013,9(5):442-451
Listeria monocytogenes is an intracellular pathogen that is able to colonize the cytosol of macrophages. Here we examined the interaction of this pathogen with autophagy, a host cytosolicdegradative pathway that constitutes an important component of innate immunity towards microbial invaders. L. monocytogenes infection induced activation of the autophagy system in macrophages. At 1 h post infection (p.i.), a population of intracellular bacteria (~37%) colocalized with the autophagy marker LC3. These bacteria were within vacuoles and were targeted by autophagy in an LLO-dependent manner. At later stages in infection (by 4 h p.i.), the majority of L. monocytogenes escaped into the cytosol and rapidly replicated. At these times, less than 10% of intracellular bacteria colocalized with LC3. We found that ActA expression was sufficient to prevent autophagy of bacteria in the cytosol of macrophages. Surprisingly, ActA expression was not strictly necessary, indicating that other virulence factors were involved. Accordingly, we also found a role for the bacterial phospholipases, PI-PLC and PC-PLC, in autophagy evasion, as bacteria lacking phospholipase expression were targeted by autophagy at later times in infection. Together, our results demonstratethat L. monocytogenes utilizes multiple mechanisms to avoid destruction by the autophagy system during colonization of macrophages.  相似文献   

5.
《Autophagy》2013,9(2):117-125
Autophagy has been recently proposed to be a component of the innate cellular immune response against several types of intracellular microorganisms. However, other intracellular bacteria including Listeria monocytogenes have been thought to evade the autophagic cellular surveillance. Here, we show that cellular infection by L. monocytogenes induces an autophagic response, which inhibits the growth of both the wild-type and a delta actA mutant strain, the latter being impaired in cell-to-cell spreading. The onset of early intracellular growth is accelerated in autophagy-deficient cells, but the growth rate once bacteria begin to multiply in the cytosol does not change. Moreover, a significant fraction of the intracellular bacteria co-localize with autophagosomes at the early time-points after infection. Thus, autophagy targets L. monocytogenes during primary infection by limiting the onset of early bacterial growth. The bacterial expression of listeriolysin O but not phospholipases is necessary for the induction of autophagy, suggesting a possible role for permeabilization of the vacuole in the induction of autophagy. Interestingly, the growth of a delta plcA/B L. monocytogenes strain deficient for bacterial phospholipases is impaired in wild-type cells, but restored in the absence of autophagy, suggesting that bacterial phospholipases may facilitate the escape of bacteria from autophagic degradation. We conclude that L. monocytogenes are targeted for degradation by autophagy during the primary infection, in the early phase of the intracellular cycle, following listeriolysin O-dependent vacuole perforation but preceding active multiplication in the cytosol, and that expression of bacterial phospholipases is necessary for the evasion of autophagy.  相似文献   

6.
Listeria monocytogenes is an intracellular bacterial pathogen that can replicate in the cytosol of host cells. These bacteria undergo actin-based motility in the cytosol via expression of ActA, which recruits host actin-regulatory proteins to the bacterial surface. L. monocytogenes is thought to evade killing by autophagy using ActA-dependent mechanisms. ActA-independent mechanisms of autophagy evasion have also been proposed, but remain poorly understood. Here we examined autophagy of non-motile (ΔactA) mutants of L. monocytogenes strains 10403S and EGD-e, two commonly studied strains of this pathogen. The ΔactA mutants displayed accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins and p62/SQSTM1 on their surface. However, only strain EGD-e ΔactA displayed colocalization with the autophagy marker LC3 at 8 hours post infection. A bacteriostatic agent (chloramphenicol) was required for LC3 recruitment to 10403S ΔactA, suggesting that these bacteria produce a factor for autophagy evasion. Internalin K was proposed to block autophagy of L. monocytogenes in the cytosol of host cells. However, deletion of inlK in either the wild-type or ΔactA background of strain 10403S had no impact on autophagy evasion by bacteria, indicating it does not play an essential role in evading autophagy. Replication of ΔactA mutants of strain EGD-e and 10403S was comparable to their parent wild-type strain in macrophages. Thus, ΔactA mutants of L. monocytogenes can block killing by autophagy at a step downstream of protein ubiquitination and, in the case of strain EGD-e, downstream of LC3 recruitment to bacteria. Our findings highlight the strain-specific differences in the mechanisms that L. monocytogenes uses to evade killing by autophagy in host cells.  相似文献   

7.
Tumor immunotherapy is currently at the cusp of becoming an important aspect of comprehensive cancer treatment in the clinic. However, the need for improved adjuvants to augment immune responses against tumor antigens is always present. In this paper, we characterize the Listeria monocytogenes-derived actin-nucleating protein, ActA, as a novel adjuvant for use in tumor immunotherapy. ActA is a virulence factor that is expressed on the cell surface of L. monocytogenes and facilitates the production of actin tails that propel Listeria throughout the cytosol of an infected host cell. It is believed that this ActA-dependent cytosolic motility allows Listeria to evade adaptive host cell defenses and facilitates its invasion into a proximal uninfected host cell. However, there is evidence that ActA fused to a tumor antigen and delivered by L. monocytogenes can perform a beneficial function in tumor immunotherapy as an adjuvant. Our investigation of this adjuvant activity demonstrates that ActA, either fused to or administered as a mixture with a tumor antigen, can augment anti-tumor immune responses, break immune tolerance and facilitate tumor eradication, which suggests that ActA is not only an effective adjuvant in tumor immunotherapy but can also be applied in a number of therapeutic settings.  相似文献   

8.
The bacterial pathogen Listeria monocytogenes induces internalization into mammalian cells and uses actin‐based motility to spread within tissues. Listeria accomplishes this intracellular life cycle by exploiting or antagonizing several host GTPases. Internalization into human cells is mediated by the bacterial surface proteins InlA or InlB. These two modes of uptake each require a host actin polymerization pathway comprised of the GTPase Rac1, nucleation promotion factors, and the Arp2/3 complex. In addition to Rac1, InlB‐mediated internalization involves inhibition of the GTPase Arf6 and participation of Dynamin and septin family GTPases. After uptake, Listeria is encased in host phagosomes. The bacterial protein GAPDH inactivates the human GTPase Rab5, thereby delaying phagosomal acquisition of antimicrobial properties. After bacterial‐induced destruction of the phagosome, cytosolic Listeria uses the surface protein ActA to stimulate actin‐based motility. The GTPase Dynamin 2 reduces the density of microtubules that would otherwise limit bacterial movement. Cell‐to‐cell spread results when motile Listeria remodel the host plasma membrane into protrusions that are engulfed by neighbouring cells. The human GTPase Cdc42, its activator Tuba, and its effector N‐WASP form a complex with the potential to restrict Listeria protrusions. Bacteria overcome this restriction through two microbial factors that inhibit Cdc42‐GTP or Tuba/N‐WASP interaction.  相似文献   

9.
Listeria monocytogenes is a pathogenic bacterium that moves within infected cells and spreads directly between cells by harnessing the cell's dendritic actin machinery. This motility is dependent on expression of a single bacterial surface protein, ActA, a constitutively active Arp2,3 activator, and has been widely studied as a biochemical and biophysical model system for actin-based motility. Dendritic actin network dynamics are important for cell processes including eukaryotic cell motility, cytokinesis, and endocytosis. Here we experimentally altered the degree of ActA polarity on a population of bacteria and made use of an ActA-RFP fusion to determine the relationship between ActA distribution and speed of bacterial motion. We found a positive linear relationship for both ActA intensity and polarity with speed. We explored the underlying mechanisms of this dependence with two distinctly different quantitative models: a detailed agent-based model in which each actin filament and branched network is explicitly simulated, and a three-state continuum model that describes a simplified relationship between bacterial speed and barbed-end actin populations. In silico bacterial motility required a cooperative restraining mechanism to reconstitute our observed speed-polarity relationship, suggesting that kinetic friction between actin filaments and the bacterial surface, a restraining force previously neglected in motility models, is important in determining the effect of ActA polarity on bacterial motility. The continuum model was less restrictive, requiring only a filament number-dependent restraining mechanism to reproduce our experimental observations. However, seemingly rational assumptions in the continuum model, e.g. an average propulsive force per filament, were invalidated by further analysis with the agent-based model. We found that the average contribution to motility from side-interacting filaments was actually a function of the ActA distribution. This ActA-dependence would be difficult to intuit but emerges naturally from the nanoscale interactions in the agent-based representation.  相似文献   

10.
Autophagy is an important mechanism of innate immune defense. We have recently shown that autophagy components are recruited with septins, a new and increasingly characterized cytoskeleton component, to intracytosolic Shigella that have started to polymerize actin. On the other hand, intracytosolic Listeria avoids autophagy recognition by expressing ActA, a bacterial effector required for actin polymerization. Here, we exploit Shigella and Listeria as intracytosolic tools to characterize different pathways of selective autophagy. We show that the ubiquitin-binding adaptor proteins p62 and NDP52 target Shigella to an autophagy pathway dependent upon septin and actin. In contrast, p62 or NDP52 targets the Listeria ActA mutant to an autophagy pathway independent of septin or actin. TNF-α, a host cytokine produced upon bacterial infection, stimulates p62-mediated autophagic activity and restricts the survival of Shigella and the Listeria ActA mutant. These data provide a new molecular framework to understand the emerging complexity of autophagy and its ability to achieve specific clearance of intracytosolic bacteria.  相似文献   

11.
Type I interferons (IFNs) play a critical role in antiviral immune responses, but can be deleterious to the host during some bacterial infections. Listeria monocytogenes (Lm) induces a type I IFN response by activating cytosolic antiviral surveillance pathways. This is beneficial to the bacteria as mice lacking the type I IFN receptor (IFNAR1?/?) are resistant to systemic infection by Lm. The mechanisms by which type I IFNs promote Lm infection are unclear. Here, we show that IFNAR1 is required for dissemination of Lm within infection foci in livers of infected mice and for efficient cell‐to‐cell spread in vitro in macrophages. IFNAR1 promotes ActA polarization and actin‐based motility in the cytosol of host cells. Our studies suggest type I IFNs directly impact the intracellular life cycle of Lm and provide new insight into the mechanisms used by bacterial pathogens to exploit the type I IFN response.  相似文献   

12.
The facultative intracellular human pathogenic bacterium Listeria monocytogenes actively recruits host actin to its surface to achieve motility within infected cells. The bacterial surface protein ActA is solely responsible for this process by mimicking fundamental steps of host cell actin dynamics. ActA, a modular protein, contains an N-terminal actin nucleation site and a central proline-rich motif of the 4-fold repeated consensus sequence FPPPP (FP(4)). This motif is specifically recognized by members of the Ena/VASP protein family. These proteins additionally recruit the profilin-G-actin complex increasing the local concentration of G-actin close to the bacterial surface. By using analytical ultracentrifugation, we show that a single ActA molecule can simultaneously interact with four Ena/VASP homology 1 (EVH1) domains. The four FP(4) sites have roughly equivalent affinities with dissociation constants of about 4 microm. Mutational analysis of the FP(4) motifs indicate that the phenylalanine is mandatory for ActA-EVH1 interaction, whereas in each case exchange of the third proline was tolerated. Finally, by using sedimentation equilibrium centrifugation techniques, we demonstrate that ActA is a monomeric protein. By combining these results, we formulate a stoichiometric model to describe how ActA enables Listeria to utilize efficiently resources of the host cell microfilament for its own intracellular motility.  相似文献   

13.
Entry of Listeria monocytogenes into cultured epithelial cells requires production of internalin, a protein with features characteristic of some Gram-positive bacterial surface proteins, in particular an LPXTG motif preceding a hydrophobic sequence and a few basic residues at its C-terminal end. By immunofluorescence and immunogold labelling, we show that in wild-type L. monocytogenes, internalin is present on the cell surface and has a polarized distribution similar to that of ActA, another surface protein of L. monocytogenes involved in actin assembly. Through a genetic analysis, we establish that the C-terminal region of internalin is necessary for cell-surface association, and that although internalin is partially released in the culture medium, its location on the bacterial surface is required to promote entry. Finally, using a‘domain-swapping’strategy - replacement of the cell wall anchor of InIA by the membrane anchor of ActA - we show that the reduced ability to adhere and enter cells of strains expressing InIA-ActA correlates with a lower amount of surface-exposed internalin. Taken together, these results suggest that internalin exposed on the bacterial surface mediates direct contact between the bacterium and the host cell.  相似文献   

14.
《Autophagy》2013,9(6):744-753
Burkholderia pseudomallei is the causative agent of melioidosis, a tropical infection of humans and other animals. The bacterium is an intracellular pathogen that can escape from endosomes into the host cytoplasm, where it replicates and infects adjacent cells. We investigated the role played by autophagy in the intracellular survival of B. pseudomallei in phagocytic and non-phagocytic cell lines. Autophagy was induced in response to B. pseudomallei invasion of murine macrophage (RAW 264.7) cells and a proportion of the bacteria co-localized with the autophagy effector protein LC3, a marker for autophagosome formation. Pharmacological stimulation of autophagy in RAW 264.7 and murine embryonic fibroblast (MEF) cell lines resulted in increased co-localization of B. pseudomallei with LC3 while basal levels of co-localization could be abrogated using inhibitors of the autophagic pathway. Furthermore, induction of autophagy decreased the intracellular survival of B. pseudomallei in these cell lines, but bacterial survival was not affected in MEF cell lines deficient in autophagy. Treatment of infected macrophages with chloramphenicol increased the proportion of bacteria within autophagosomes indicating that autophagic evasion is an active process relying on bacterial protein synthesis. Consistent with this hypothesis, we identified a B. pseudomallei type III secreted protein, BopA, which plays a role in mediating bacterial evasion of autophagy. We conclude that the autophagic pathway is a component of the innate defense system against invading B. pseudomallei, but which the bacteria can actively evade. However, when autophagy is pharmacologically induced using rapamycin, bacteria are actively sequestered in autophagosomes, ultimately decreasing their survival.  相似文献   

15.
Mechanism of polarization of Listeria monocytogenes surface protein ActA   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The polar distribution of the ActA protein on the surface of the Gram-positive intracellular bacterial pathogen, Listeria monocytogenes, is required for bacterial actin-based motility and successful infection. ActA spans both the bacterial membrane and the peptidoglycan cell wall. We have directly examined the de novo ActA polarization process in vitro by using an ActA-RFP (red fluorescent protein) fusion. After induction of expression, ActA initially appeared at distinct sites along the sides of bacteria and was then redistributed over the entire cylindrical cell body through helical cell wall growth. The accumulation of ActA at the bacterial poles displayed slower kinetics, occurring over several bacterial generations. ActA accumulated more efficiently at younger, less inert poles, and proper polarization required an optimal balance between protein secretion and bacterial growth rates. Within infected host cells, younger generations of L. monocytogenes initiated motility more quickly than older ones, consistent with our in vitro observations of de novo ActA polarization. We propose a model in which the polarization of ActA, and possibly other Gram-positive cell wall-associated proteins, may be a direct consequence of the differential cell wall growth rates along the bacterium and dependent on the relative rates of protein secretion, protein degradation and bacterial growth.  相似文献   

16.
The bacterial pathogen Listeria monocytogenes displays the remarkable ability to reorganize the actin cytoskeleton within host cells as a means for promoting cell-to-cell transfer of the pathogen, in a manner that evades humoral immunity. In a series of events commencing with the biosynthesis of the bacterial surface protein ActA, host cell actin and many actin-associated protein self-assemble to from rocket-tail structures that continually grow at sites proximal to the bacterium and depolymerize distally. Widespread interest in the underlying molecular mechanism of Listeria locomotion stems from the likelihood that the dynamic remodeling of the host cell actin cytoskeleton at the cell's leading edge involves mechanistically analogous interactions. Recent advances in our understanding of these fundamental cytoskeletal rearrangements have been achieved through a clearer recognition of the central role of oligo-proline sequence repeats present in ActA, and these findings provide a basis for inferring the role of analogous host cell proteins in the force-producing and position-securing steps in pseudopod and lamellipod formation at the peripheral membrane.  相似文献   

17.
《Autophagy》2013,9(9):957-965
Autophagy plays a significant role in innate and adaptive immune responses to microbial infection. Some pathogenic bacteria have developed strategies to evade killing by host autophagy. These include the use of ‘camouflage’ proteins to block targeting to the autophagy pathway and the use of pore-forming toxins to block autophagosome maturation. However, general inhibition of host autophagy by bacterial pathogens has not been observed to date. Here we demonstrate that bacterial cAMP-elevating toxins from B. anthracis and V. cholera can inhibit host anti-microbial autophagy, including autophagic targeting of S. Typhimurium and latex bead phagosomes. Autophagy inhibition required the cAMP effector protein kinase A. Formation of autophagosomes in response to rapamycin and the endogenous turnover of peroxisomes was also inhibited by cAMP-elevating toxins. These findings demonstrate that cAMP-elevating toxins, representing a large group of bacterial virulence factors, can inhibit host autophagy to suppress immune responses and modulate host cell physiology.  相似文献   

18.
The Listeria monocytogenes ActA protein acts as a scaffold to assemble and activate host cell actin cytoskeletal factors at the bacterial surface, resulting in directional actin polymerization and propulsion of the bacterium through the cytoplasm. We have constructed 20 clustered charged-to-alanine mutations in the NH2-terminal domain of ActA and replaced the endogenous actA gene with these molecular variants. These 20 clones were evaluated in several biological assays for phenotypes associated with particular amino acid changes. Additionally, each protein variant was purified and tested for stimulation of the Arp2/3 complex, and a subset was tested for actin monomer binding. These specific mutations refined the two regions involved in Arp2/3 activation and suggest that the actin-binding sequence of ActA spans 40 amino acids. We also identified a 'motility rate and cloud-to-tail transition' region in which nine contiguous mutations spanning amino acids 165-260 caused motility rate defects and changed the ratio of intracellular bacteria associated with actin clouds and comet tails without affecting Arp2/3 activation. Several unusual motility phenotypes were associated with amino acid changes in this region, including altered paths through the cytoplasm, discontinuous actin tails in host cells and the tendency to 'skid' or dramatically change direction while moving. These unusual phenotypes illustrate the complexity of ActA functions that control the actin-based motility of L. monocytogenes.  相似文献   

19.
Dortet L  Mostowy S  Cossart P 《Autophagy》2012,8(1):132-134
Autophagy is a cell-autonomous mechanism of innate immunity that protects the cytosol against bacterial infection. Invasive bacteria, including Listeria monocytogenes, have thus evolved strategies to counteract a process that limits their intracellular growth. ActA is a surface protein produced by L. monocytogenes to polymerize actin and mediate intra- and intercellular movements, which plays a critical role in autophagy escape. We have recently investigated the role of another L. monocytogenes surface protein, the internalin InlK, in the infection process. We showed that in the cytosol of infected cells, InlK interacts with the Major Vault Protein (MVP), the main component of cytoplasmic ribonucleoprotein particles named vaults. Although MVP has been implicated in a variety of key cellular process, its role remains elusive. We demonstrated that L. monocytogenes is able, via InlK, to decorate its surface with MVP in order to escape autophagic recognition. Strikingly, this new strategy used by L. monocytogenes to avoid autophagy is independent of ActA, suggesting that InlK-MVP interactions and actin polymerization are two processes that favor in the same manner the infection process. Understanding the role of MVP may provide new insights into bacterial infection and autophagy.  相似文献   

20.
Upon infection of mammalian cells, Listeria monocytogenes lyses the phagosome and enters the cytosol, where it secretes proteins necessary for its intracellular growth cycle. Consequently, bacterial proteins exposed to the cytosol are potential targets for degradation by host cytosolic proteases. One pathway for degradation of host cytosolic proteins, the N-end rule pathway, involves recognition of the N-terminal amino acid and is mediated by the proteasome. However, very few natural N-end rule substrates have been identified. We have examined the L. monocytogenes ActA protein as a potential target for this pathway. ActA is an essential determinant of L. monocytogenes pathogenesis that is required to induce actin-based motility and cell-to-cell spread. We show that the half-life of a secreted form of ActA can be altered in the mammalian cytosol by changing the N-terminal amino acid. Moreover, the introduction of a destabilizing N-terminus into the functional, surface-bound form of ActA results in a small-plaque phenotype in L2 cells, which is partially reversible by an inhibitor of the proteasome. These results indicate that the L. monocytogenes ActA protein is a natural N-end rule substrate, and that optimal function of ActA in mediating cell-to-cell spread is dependent upon its intracellular turnover rate.  相似文献   

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