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Yersinia phosphatase induces mitochondrially dependent apoptosis of T cells
Authors:Bruckner Shane  Rhamouni Souad  Tautz Lutz  Denault Jean-Bernard  Alonso Andres  Becattini Barbara  Salvesen Guy S  Mustelin Tomas
Affiliation:Program of Inflammation, Infectious and Inflammatory Disease Center, Cancer Center, The Burnham Institute, La Jolla, California 92037, USA.
Abstract:To evade the immune system, the etiologic agent of plague, Yersinia pestis, injects an exceptionally active tyrosine phosphatase called YopH into host cells using a type III secretion system. We recently reported that YopH acutely inhibits T cell antigen receptor signaling by dephosphorylating the Lck tyrosine kinase. Here, we show that prolonged presence of YopH in primary T cells or Jurkat T leukemia cells causes apoptosis, detected by annexin V binding, mitochondrial breakdown, caspase activation, and internucleosomal fragmentation. YopH also causes cell death when expressed in HeLa cells, and this cell death was inhibited by YopH-specific small molecule inhibitors. Cell death induced by YopH was also prevented by caspase inhibition or co-expression of Bcl-xL. We conclude that YopH not only paralyzes T cells acutely, but also ensures that the cells will not recover to induce a protective immune response but instead undergo mitochondrially regulated programmed cell death.
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