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1.
2.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa, an important nosocomial pathogen of humans, expresses a type III secretion system that is required for virulence. Previous studies demonstrated that the lung-virulent strain PA103 has the capacity to be either cytotoxic or invasive. Analyses of mutants suggest that PA103 delivers a negative regulator of invasion, or anti-internalization factor, to host cells via a type III secretion system. In this work we show that the type III secreted protein ExoT inhibits the internalization of PA103 by polarized epithelial cells (Madin-Darby canine kidney cells) and J774.1 macrophage-like cells. ExoS, which is closely related to ExoT but has additional ADP-ribosylating activity, can substitute for ExoT as an anti-internalization factor. ExoT contains a signature arginine finger domain found in GTPase-activating proteins. Mutation of the conserved arginine in ExoT diminished its anti-internalization activity and altered its ability to disrupt the actin cytoskeleton. Cell fractionation experiments showed that ExoT is translocated into host cells and that mutation of the arginine finger did not disrupt translocation. In a mouse model of acute pneumonia, PA103DeltaUDeltaT reached the lungs as efficiently as PA103DeltaU but showed reduced colonization of the liver. This finding suggests that the ability to resist internalization may be important for virulence in vivo.  相似文献   

3.
Nonvertebrate model hosts represent valuable tools for the study of host-pathogen interactions because they facilitate the identification of bacterial virulence factors and allow the discovery of novel components involved in host innate immune responses. In this report, we determined that the greater wax moth caterpillar Galleria mellonella is a convenient nonmammalian model host for study of the role of the type III secretion system (TTSS) in Pseudomonas aeruginosa pathogenesis. Based on the observation that a mutation in the TTSS pscD gene of P. aeruginosa strain PA14 resulted in a highly attenuated virulence phenotype in G. mellonella, we examined the roles of the four known effector proteins of P. aeruginosa (ExoS, ExoT, ExoU, and ExoY) in wax moth killing. We determined that in P. aeruginosa strain PA14, only ExoT and ExoU play a significant role in G. mellonella killing. Strain PA14 lacks the coding sequence for the ExoS effector protein and does not seem to express ExoY. Moreover, using Delta exoU Delta exoY, Delta exoT Delta exoY, and Delta exoT Delta exoU double mutants, we determined that individual translocation of either ExoT or ExoU is sufficient to obtain nearly wild-type levels of G. mellonella killing. On the other hand, data obtained with a Delta exoT Delta exoU Delta exoY triple mutant and a Delta pscD mutant suggested that additional, as-yet-unidentified P. aeruginosa components of type III secretion are involved in virulence in G. mellonella. A high level of correlation between the results obtained in the G. mellonella model and the results of cytopathology assays performed with a mammalian tissue culture system validated the use of G. mellonella for the study of the P. aeruginosa TTSS.  相似文献   

4.
Acute pneumonias and corneal infections due to Pseudomonas aeruginosa are typically caused by lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-smooth strains. In cystic fibrosis patients, however, LPS-rough strains of P. aeruginosa, which lack O antigen, can survive in the lung and cause chronic infection. It is not clear whether an LPS-rough phenotype affects cytotoxicity related to the type III secretion system (TTSS). We previously reported that interruption of the galU gene in P. aeruginosa results in production of a rough LPS and truncated LPS core. Here we evaluated the role of the galU gene in the pathogenesis of murine lung and eye infections and in cytotoxicity due to the TTSS effector ExoU. We studied galU mutants of strain PAO1, of its cytotoxic variant expressing ExoU from a plasmid, and of the inherently cytotoxic strain PA103. The galU mutants were more serum sensitive than the parental strains but remained cytotoxic in vitro. In a corneal infection model, the galU mutants were significantly attenuated. In an acute pneumonia model, the 50% lethal doses of the galU mutants were higher than those of the corresponding wild-type strains, yet these mutants could cause mortality and severe pneumonia, as judged by histology, even with minimal systemic spread. These findings suggest that the galU gene is required for corneal infection and for efficient systemic spread following lung infection but is not required for infection confined to the lung. Host defenses in the lung appear to be insufficient to control infection with LPS-rough P. aeruginosa when local bacterial levels are high.  相似文献   

5.
The type III secretion system (TTSS) is a specialized cytotoxin-translocating apparatus of gram-negative bacteria which is involved in lung injury, septic shock, and a poor patient outcome. Recent studies have attributed these effects mainly to the ExoU effector protein. However, few studies have focused on the ExoU-independent pathogenicity of the TTSS. For the present study, we compared the pathogenicities of two strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa in a murine model of acute lung injury. We compared the CHA strain, which has a functional TTSS producing ExoS and ExoT but not ExoU, to an isogenic mutant with an inactivated exsA gene, CHA-D1, which does not express the TTSS at all. Rats challenged with CHA had significantly increased lung injury, as assessed by the wet/dry weight ratio for the lungs and the protein level in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) at 12 h, compared to those challenged with CHA-D1. Consistent with these findings, the CHA strain was associated with increased in vitro cytotoxicity on A549 cells, as assessed by the release of lactate dehydrogenase. CHA was also associated at 12 h with a major decrease in polymorphonuclear neutrophils in BALF, with a proinflammatory response, as assessed by the amounts of tumor necrosis factor alpha and interleukin-1beta, and with decreased bacterial clearance from the lungs, ultimately leading to an increased mortality rate. These results demonstrate that the TTSS has a major role in P. aeruginosa pathogenicity independent of the role of ExoU. This report underscores the crucial roles of ExoS and ExoT or other TTSS-related virulence factors in addition to ExoU.  相似文献   

6.
Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium utilizes a type III secretion system (TTSS) encoded on Salmonella pathogenicity island-2 (SPI2) to promote intracellular replication during infection, but little is known about the molecular function of SPI2-translocated effectors and how they contribute to this process. SseJ is a SPI2 TTSS effector protein that is homologous to enzymes called glycerophospholipid-cholesterol acyltransferases and, following translocation, localizes to the Salmonella-containing vacuole and Salmonella-induced filaments. Full virulence requires SseJ, as sseJ null mutants exhibit decreased replication in cultured cells and host tissues. This work demonstrates that SseJ is an enzyme with deacylase activity in vitro and identifies three active-site residues. Catalytic SseJ mutants display wild-type translocation and subcellular localization but fail to complement the virulence defect of an sseJ null mutant. In contrast to the wild type, SseJ catalytic mutants fail to down regulate Salmonella-induced filament formation and fail to restore the sifA null mutant phenotype of loss of phagosomal membrane to sifA sseJ null double mutants, suggesting that wild-type SseJ modifies the vacuolar membrane. This is the first demonstration of an enzymatic activity for a SPI2 effector protein and provides support for the hypothesis that the deacylation of lipids on the Salmonella-containing vacuole membrane is important to bacterial pathogenesis.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Infections caused by the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa involve the interplay of several bacterial virulence factors. It has recently been established that the delivery of toxic effector proteins by the type III secretion system is an important virulence mechanism in several animal models. Furthermore, the expression of the type III secretion system and its effectors has been correlated with a poor clinical outcome during human infections. A novel cyclic AMP (cAMP) regulatory network that controls the expression of virulence factors, including the type III secretion system, was examined to determine its contribution to P. aeruginosa colonization and dissemination in a mouse pneumonia model. Mutants lacking the two genome-encoded adenylate cyclases, CyaA and CyaB, and the cAMP-dependent regulator Vfr were examined. Based on the enumeration of bacteria in lungs, livers, and spleens, as well as the assessment of mouse lung pathology, mutations in the cyaB and vfr genes resulted in a more significantly attenuated phenotype than mutations in cyaA. Moreover, in this model, expression of the type III secretion system was essential for lung colonization and pathology. Strains with mutations in the exsA gene, which encodes a type III regulatory protein, or pscC, which encodes an essential component of the secretion apparatus, were also significantly attenuated. Finally, we demonstrate that virulence can be restored in an adenylate cyclase mutant by the overexpression of exsA, which specifically restores expression of the type III secretion system in the absence of a functional cAMP-dependent regulatory network.  相似文献   

9.
Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium is a leading cause of acute gastroenteritis throughout the world. This pathogen has two type III secretion systems (TTSS) encoded in Salmonella pathogenicity islands 1 and 2 (SPI-1 and SPI-2) that deliver virulence factors (effectors) to the host cell cytoplasm and are required for virulence. While many effectors have been identified and at least partially characterized, the full repertoire of effectors has not been catalogued. In this proteomic study, we identified effector proteins secreted into defined minimal medium designed to induce expression of the SPI-2 TTSS and its effectors. We compared the secretomes of the parent strain to those of strains missing essential (ssaK::cat) or regulatory (ΔssaL) components of the SPI-2 TTSS. We identified 20 known SPI-2 effectors. Excluding the translocon components SseBCD, all SPI-2 effectors were biased for identification in the ΔssaL mutant, substantiating the regulatory role of SsaL in TTS. To identify novel effector proteins, we coupled our secretome data with a machine learning algorithm (SIEVE, SVM-based identification and evaluation of virulence effectors) and selected 12 candidate proteins for further characterization. Using CyaA' reporter fusions, we identified six novel type III effectors and two additional proteins that were secreted into J774 macrophages independently of a TTSS. To assess their roles in virulence, we constructed nonpolar deletions and performed a competitive index analysis from intraperitoneally infected 129/SvJ mice. Six mutants were significantly attenuated for spleen colonization. Our results also suggest that non-type III secretion mechanisms are required for full Salmonella virulence.  相似文献   

10.
The Pseudomonas aeruginosa protein ExoT is a bacterial GTPase-activating protein (GAP) that has in vitro activity toward Rho, Rac, and Cdc42 GTPases. Expression of ExoT both inhibits the internalization of strain PA103 by macrophages and epithelial cells and is associated with morphological changes (cell rounding and detachment) of infected cells. We find that expression of ExoT leads to the loss of GTP-bound RhoA, Rac1, and Cdc42 in transfected HeLa cells, demonstrating that ExoT has GAP activity in vivo toward all three GTPases. GAP activity is absolutely dependent on the presence of arginine at position 149 but is not affected by whether ExoT is expressed in the absence or presence of other P. aeruginosa type III secreted proteins. We also demonstrate that expression of ExoT in epithelial cells is sufficient to cause stress fiber disassembly by means of ExoT's GAP activity toward RhoA.  相似文献   

11.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa uses a type III secretion system to promote development of severe disease, particularly in patients with impaired immune defenses. While the biochemical and enzymatic functions of ExoU, ExoS, and ExoT, three effector proteins secreted by this system, are well defined, the relative roles of each protein in the pathogenesis of acute infections is not clearly understood. Since ExoU and ExoS are usually not secreted by the same strain, it has been difficult to directly compare the effects of these proteins during infection. In the work described here, several isogenic mutants of a bacterial strain that naturally secretes ExoU, ExoS, and ExoT were generated to carefully evaluate the relative contribution of each effector protein to pathogenesis in a mouse model of acute pneumonia. Measurements of mortality, bacterial persistence in the lung, and dissemination indicated that secretion of ExoU had the greatest impact on virulence while secretion of ExoS had an intermediate effect and ExoT had a minor effect. It is of note that these results conclusively show for the first time that ExoS is a virulence factor. Infection with isogenic mutants secreting wild-type ExoS, ExoS defective in GTPase-activating protein (GAP) activity, or ExoS defective in ADP-ribosyltransferase activity demonstrated that the virulence of ExoS was largely dependent on its ADP-ribosyltransferase activity. The GAP activity of this protein had only a minor effect in vivo. The relative virulence associated with each of these type III effector proteins may have important prognostic implications for patients infected with P. aeruginosa.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Ha U  Jin S 《Infection and immunity》2001,69(7):4398-4406
Clinical isolates of Pseudomonas aeruginosa are classified into invasive and noninvasive (cytolytic) strains. In a noninvasive PA103 background, ExoS and ExoT have recently been shown to function as anti-internalization factors. However, these two factors seemed not to have such a function in an invasive strain PAK background. In this study, using HeLa tissue culture cells, we observed that the internalization of invasive strain PAK is dependent on its growth phases, with the stationary-phase cells internalized about 100-fold more efficiently than the exponential-phase cells. This growth phase-dependent internalization was not observed in the noninvasive PA103 strain. Further analysis of various mutant derivatives of the invasive PAK and the noninvasive PA103 strains demonstrated that ExoS or ExoT that is injected into host cells by a type III secretion machinery functions as an anti-internalization factor in both types of strains. In correlation with the growth phase-dependent internalization, the invasive strain PAK translocates much higher amount of ExoS and ExoT into HeLa cells when it is in an exponential-growth phase than when it is in a stationary-growth phase, whereas the translocation of ExoT by the noninvasive strain PA103 is consistently high regardless of the growth phases, suggesting a difference in the regulatory mechanism of type III secretion between the two types of strains. Consistent with the invasive phenotype of the parent strain, an internalized PAK derivative survived well within the HeLa cells, whereas the viability of internalized PA103 derivative was dramatically decreased and completely cleared within 48 h. These results indicate that the invasive strains of P. aeruginosa have evolved the mechanism of intracellular survival, whereas the noninvasive P. aeruginosa strains have lost or not acquired the ability to survive within the epithelial cells.  相似文献   

14.
Exotoxin A (P-ExA) is considered to be a major virulence factor of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Neutrophils, cytokines and nitric oxide (NO) have been implicated as important components of an effective host defence against bacterial respiratory tract infection. To study the role of P-ExA in the pathogenesis of P. aeruginosa pneumonia, C57Bl/6 mice were inoculated intranasally with wild-type PA103 or a mutant P. aeruginosa strain that did not produce P-ExA, PA103-29. P-ExA facilitated the outgrowth of P. aeruginosa in lungs, as reflected by an increasing number of cfu during pneumonia with strain PA103, whereas the number of cfu decreased during pulmonary infection with strain PA103-29. Influx of neutrophils was similar in broncho-alveolar lavage fluids (BALF) during pneumonia with strains PA103 and PA103-29. Lung levels of cytokines (tumor necrosis factor-alpha, interleukin-6) and chemokines (macrophage inflammatory protein-2, KC) were higher in mice inoculated with strain PA103, whereas BALF concentrations of NO were similar in mice treated with strains PA103 and PA103-29. These data suggest that P-ExA impairs host defence during pneumonia caused by P. aeruginosa by a mechanism that does not involve effects on neutrophil influx, cytokines, chemokines or NO formation.  相似文献   

15.
Mutants of Pseudomonas aeruginosa are described which are markedly deficient in alkaline protease production. Characterization of these mutants in vitro suggests that the mutations in two of these strains are specific for alkaline protease production. Examination of these mutants in a mouse eye model demonstrates that alkaline protease is required for the establishment of corneal infections with P. aeruginosa PA103. Mutants deficient in alkaline protease production could not colonize traumatized cornea and did not produce the corneal damage characteristic of infection by the parental strain. Addition of subdamaging amounts of alkaline protease to eyes infected with the protease-deficient mutants resulted in infections which were indistinguishable from infections caused by the parental strain.  相似文献   

16.
To obtain a better understanding of the mechanisms involved in the up-regulation of the Fas apoptotic signaling cascade induced by P. aeruginosa type III secretion system (TTSS), human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) were infected with P. aeruginosa PAO-1 or its TTSS-negative mutant PAO-1::exsA. PAO-1 was significantly more cytotoxic than the mutant and features of apoptosis (DNA fragmentation and annexin V reactivity) were more prominent in cultures infected with the wild-type bacteria. PAO-1 induced the up-regulation of Fas and the release of soluble FasL (sFasL) from infected cells but cell treatment with antagonist anti-Fas did not completely abrogate apoptosis suggesting that, besides the activated Fas-FasL pathway, other mechanisms are likely to be associated with the induction of apoptosis. LNMMA, a potent inhibitor of NO synthesis, completely inhibited apoptosis in both PAO-1 and PAO-1::exsA infected cultures. Moreover, PAO-1 was shown to up-regulate both the expression of iNOS and NO production by HUVEC. Treatment of cells with LNMMA completely inhibited cell expression of mFas. Based on these results we speculate that P. aeruginosa TTSS not only accounts for HUVEC higher expression of Fas and release of sFasL but also leads to overproduction of NO and to a NO-dependent up-regulation of the Fas-FasL proteins.  相似文献   

17.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa utilizes a number of distinct pathways to secrete proteins that play various roles during infection. These include the type II secretion system, which is responsible for the secretion of the majority of exoproducts into the surrounding environment, including toxins and degradative enzymes. In contrast, the type III secretion system mediates the delivery of protein effectors directly into the cytoplasm of the host cell. Using tissue culture assays and a mouse acute-pneumonia model, we have determined the contribution of each of the type III effectors during infection. In strain PAK, ExoS is the major cytotoxin required for colonization and dissemination during infection. ExoT confers protection of tissue culture cells from type III-dependent lysis, while ExoY seemed to have little effect on cytotoxicity. ExoU is over 100-fold more cytotoxic than ExoS. The cytotoxicity of type II secretion was determined following deletion of the genes for the more toxic type III secretion system. The participation of these secretion systems during lifelong colonization of cystic fibrosis (CF) patients is unclear. By comparing clonal strains from the same patient isolated at the initial onset of P. aeruginosa infection and more than a decade later, after chronic colonization has been established, we show that initial strains are more cytotoxic than chronic strains that have evolved to reduce type III secretion. Constitutive expression of genes for the type III secretion system restored ExoS secretion but did not always reestablish cytotoxicity, suggesting that CF strains accumulate a number of mutations to reduce bacterial toxicity to the host.  相似文献   

18.
Twitching motility is a form of surface-associated bacterial movement mediated by type IV pili of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Others have shown that pilT and pilU mutants, which are piliated but defective in twitching motility, display reduced cytotoxic capacity towards epithelial cells in vitro. Although these mutants efficiently infected lungs in vivo, they were defective in dissemination to the liver. In this study the role of twitching motility in P. aeruginosa epithelial cell invasion and corneal disease pathogenesis was explored. pilU and pilT mutants of P. aeruginosa strain PAK were compared to a nonpiliated pilA mutant and to wild-type bacteria in their ability to associate with and to invade corneal epithelial cells in vitro and to cause disease in a murine model of corneal infection. As expected, the pilA mutant demonstrated reduced association and invasion of corneal epithelial cells (P < 0.05 in both cases). The pilT mutant, but not the pilU mutant, was less invasive than wild-type PAK was (P < 0.05 versus P = 0.43), while both pilU and pilT mutants exhibited association levels similar to those of the wild type (P = 0.31 and 0.52, respectively). In vivo, all mutants were markedly attenuated in virulence and showed reduced ability to colonize the cornea at 4 and 48 h (all P values < 0.02). Thus, twitching motility contributed to the role of pili in corneal disease but was not involved in the role of pili in adherence to or invasion of corneal epithelial cells.  相似文献   

19.
Type IV pili of the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa mediate twitching motility and act as receptors for bacteriophage infection. They are also important bacterial adhesins, and nonpiliated mutants of P. aeruginosa have been shown to cause less epithelial cell damage in vitro and have decreased virulence in animal models. This finding raises the question as to whether the reduction in cytotoxicity and virulence of nonpiliated P. aeruginosa mutants are primarily due to defects in cell adhesion or loss of twitching motility, or both. This work describes the role of PilT and PilU, putative nucleotide-binding proteins involved in pili function, in mediating epithelial cell injury in vitro and virulence in vivo. Mutants of pilT and pilU retain surface pili but have lost twitching motility. In three different epithelial cell lines, pilT or pilU mutants of the strain PAK caused less cytotoxicity than the wild-type strain but more than isogenic, nonpiliated pilA or rpoN mutants. The pilT and pilU mutants also showed reduced association with these same epithelial cell lines compared both to the wild type, and surprisingly, to a pilA mutant. In a mouse model of acute pneumonia, the pilT and pilU mutants showed decreased colonization of the liver but not of the lung relative to the parental strain, though they exhibited no change in the ability to cause mortality. These results demonstrate that pilus function mediated by PilT and PilU is required for in vitro adherence and cytotoxicity toward epithelial cells and is important in virulence in vivo.  相似文献   

20.
Prostanoids generated by COX-2 are involved in the regulation of inflammation but their exact role in the innate immune response has not been defined. We investigated whether COX-2 is involved in host defense against Pseudomonas aeruginosa pneumonia. In vitro studies, in a macrophage cell line, showed that cytotoxic strain of P aeruginosa (PA103) induced significant COX-2 protein expression and enzymatic function. In vivo data showed that infection with PA103 increased COX-2 protein production in whole lung tissue compared to mice that were infected with mutant bacteria that lack ExoU (DeltaU) or ExoU and ExoT (DeltaUT). COX-2(-/-) mice had accentuated clearance of cytotoxic P. aeruginosa from the lungs. We further tested the effects of COX-2 products such as prostaglandin E(2) on the function of phagocytic cells. Our studies indicate that prostaglandin E(2) may be involved through interacting with the EP2 receptors in modulating the host response because treatment of macrophages with prostaglandin E(2) suppressed production of reactive oxygen species. Furthermore there was enhanced bacterial clearance in EP2 receptor(-/-) mice compared to the wild-type controls. Thus it is possible that inhibition of COX-2 or EP2 receptors could be an effective adjunctive treatment for severe or resistant P. aeruginosa pneumonia.  相似文献   

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