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1.
Cell ; 184(12): 3178-3191.e18, 2021 06 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34022140

ABSTRACT

Gasdermin B (GSDMB) belongs to a large family of pore-forming cytolysins that execute inflammatory cell death programs. While genetic studies have linked GSDMB polymorphisms to human disease, its function in the immunological response to pathogens remains poorly understood. Here, we report a dynamic host-pathogen conflict between GSDMB and the IpaH7.8 effector protein secreted by enteroinvasive Shigella flexneri. We show that IpaH7.8 ubiquitinates and targets GSDMB for 26S proteasome destruction. This virulence strategy protects Shigella from the bacteriocidic activity of natural killer cells by suppressing granzyme-A-mediated activation of GSDMB. In contrast to the canonical function of most gasdermin family members, GSDMB does not inhibit Shigella by lysing host cells. Rather, it exhibits direct microbiocidal activity through recognition of phospholipids found on Gram-negative bacterial membranes. These findings place GSDMB as a central executioner of intracellular bacterial killing and reveal a mechanism employed by pathogens to counteract this host defense system.


Subject(s)
Biomarkers, Tumor/metabolism , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Killer Cells, Natural/immunology , Neoplasm Proteins/metabolism , Pore Forming Cytotoxic Proteins/metabolism , Shigella flexneri/physiology , Ubiquitination , Animals , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Cardiolipins/metabolism , Cell Line , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Female , Granzymes/metabolism , Humans , Lipid A/metabolism , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Transgenic , Microbial Viability , Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex/metabolism , Protein Binding , Proteolysis , Substrate Specificity
2.
PLoS Pathog ; 20(5): e1012010, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38753575

ABSTRACT

Arboviruses are a diverse group of insect-transmitted pathogens that pose global public health challenges. Identifying evolutionarily conserved host factors that combat arbovirus replication in disparate eukaryotic hosts is important as they may tip the balance between productive and abortive viral replication, and thus determine virus host range. Here, we exploit naturally abortive arbovirus infections that we identified in lepidopteran cells and use bacterial effector proteins to uncover host factors restricting arbovirus replication. Bacterial effectors are proteins secreted by pathogenic bacteria into eukaryotic hosts cells that can inhibit antimicrobial defenses. Since bacteria and viruses can encounter common host defenses, we hypothesized that some bacterial effectors may inhibit host factors that restrict arbovirus replication in lepidopteran cells. Thus, we used bacterial effectors as molecular tools to identify host factors that restrict four distinct arboviruses in lepidopteran cells. By screening 210 effectors encoded by seven different bacterial pathogens, we identify several effectors that individually rescue the replication of all four arboviruses. We show that these effectors encode diverse enzymatic activities that are required to break arbovirus restriction. We further characterize Shigella flexneri-encoded IpaH4 as an E3 ubiquitin ligase that directly ubiquitinates two evolutionarily conserved proteins, SHOC2 and PSMC1, promoting their degradation in insect and human cells. We show that depletion of either SHOC2 or PSMC1 in insect or human cells promotes arbovirus replication, indicating that these are ancient virus restriction factors conserved across invertebrate and vertebrate hosts. Collectively, our study reveals a novel pathogen-guided approach to identify conserved antimicrobial machinery, new effector functions, and conserved roles for SHOC2 and PSMC1 in virus restriction.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Virus Replication , Animals , Virus Replication/physiology , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Humans , Arboviruses , Shigella flexneri/pathogenicity , Arbovirus Infections/virology , Cell Line
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 117(36): 22090-22100, 2020 09 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32839344

ABSTRACT

The application of proteinaceous toxins for cell ablation is limited by their high on- and off-target toxicity, severe side effects, and a narrow therapeutic window. The selectivity of targeting can be improved by intein-based toxin reconstitution from two dysfunctional fragments provided their cytoplasmic delivery via independent, selective pathways. While the reconstitution of proteins from genetically encoded elements has been explored, exploiting cell-surface receptors for boosting selectivity has not been attained. We designed a robust splitting algorithm and achieved reliable cytoplasmic reconstitution of functional diphtheria toxin from engineered intein-flanked fragments upon receptor-mediated delivery of one of them to the cells expressing the counterpart. Retargeting the delivery machinery toward different receptors overexpressed in cancer cells enables selective ablation of specific subpopulations in mixed cell cultures. In a mouse model, the transmembrane delivery of a split-toxin construct potently inhibits the growth of xenograft tumors expressing the split counterpart. Receptor-mediated delivery of engineered split proteins provides a platform for precise therapeutic and experimental ablation of tumors or desired cell populations while also greatly expanding the applicability of the intein-based protein transsplicing.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Toxins/administration & dosage , Bacterial Toxins/chemistry , Cytoplasm/metabolism , Drug Delivery Systems/methods , Inteins , Neoplasms/drug therapy , Animals , Bacterial Toxins/genetics , Bacterial Toxins/metabolism , Cell Line, Tumor , Cytoplasm/genetics , Diphtheria Toxin/administration & dosage , Diphtheria Toxin/chemistry , Diphtheria Toxin/genetics , Diphtheria Toxin/metabolism , Female , Heterografts , Humans , Immunotoxins/administration & dosage , Immunotoxins/chemistry , Immunotoxins/genetics , Immunotoxins/metabolism , Mice , Mice, Nude , Neoplasms/genetics , Neoplasms/metabolism , Protein Domains , Protein Transport , Receptors, Cell Surface/genetics , Receptors, Cell Surface/metabolism
4.
Int J Mol Sci ; 22(2)2021 Jan 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33450834

ABSTRACT

Actin is an essential element of both innate and adaptive immune systems and can aid in motility and translocation of bacterial pathogens, making it an attractive target for bacterial toxins. Pathogenic Vibrio and Aeromonas genera deliver actin cross-linking domain (ACD) toxin into the cytoplasm of the host cell to poison actin regulation and promptly induce cell rounding. At early stages of toxicity, ACD covalently cross-links actin monomers into oligomers (AOs) that bind through multivalent interactions and potently inhibit several families of actin assembly proteins. At advanced toxicity stages, we found that the terminal protomers of linear AOs can get linked together by ACD to produce cyclic AOs. When tested against formins and Ena/VASP, linear and cyclic AOs exhibit similar inhibitory potential, which for the cyclic AOs is reduced in the presence of profilin. In coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations, profilin and WH2-motif binding sites on actin subunits remain exposed in modeled AOs of both geometries. We speculate, therefore, that the reduced toxicity of cyclic AOs is due to their reduced configurational entropy. A characteristic feature of cyclic AOs is that, in contrast to the linear forms, they cannot be straightened to form filaments (e.g., through stabilization by cofilin), which makes them less susceptible to neutralization by the host cell.


Subject(s)
Actins/chemistry , Actins/metabolism , Bacterial Toxins/metabolism , Protein Multimerization , Actin Cytoskeleton/metabolism , Animals , Bacterial Toxins/chemistry , Binding Sites , Catalysis , Cell Line, Tumor , Conserved Sequence , Humans , Kinetics , Models, Molecular , Protein Binding , Protein Conformation , Vibrio cholerae/metabolism
5.
Curr Top Microbiol Immunol ; 399: 87-112, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27858184

ABSTRACT

Actin cross-linking toxins are produced by Gram-negative bacteria from Vibrio and Aeromonas genera. The toxins were named actin cross-linking domains (ACD), since the first and most of the subsequently discovered ACDs were found as effector domains in larger MARTX and VgrG toxins. Among recognized human pathogens, ACD is produced by Vibrio cholerae, Vibrio vulnificus, and Aeromonas hydrophila. Upon delivery to the cytoplasm of a host cell, ACD covalently cross-links actin monomers into non-polymerizable actin oligomers of various lengths. Provided sufficient doses of toxin are delivered, most or all actin can be promptly cross-linked into non-functional oligomers, leading to cell rounding, detachment from the substrate and, in many cases, cell death. Recently, a deeper layer of ACD toxicity with a less obvious but more potent mechanism was discovered. According to this finding, low doses of the ACD-produced actin oligomers can actively disrupt the actin cytoskeleton by potently inhibiting essential actin assembly proteins, formins. The first layer of toxicity is direct (as actin is the immediate and the only target), passive (since ACD-cross-linked actin oligomers are toxic only because they are non-functional), and less potent (as bulk quantities of one of the most abundant cytoplasmic proteins, actin, have to be modified). The second mechanism is indirect (as major targets, formins, are not affected by ACD directly), active (because actin oligomers act as "secondary" toxins), and highly potent [as it affects scarce and essential actin-binding proteins (ABPs)].


Subject(s)
Actins/metabolism , Aeromonas/metabolism , Aeromonas/pathogenicity , Bacterial Toxins/metabolism , Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections/metabolism , Vibrio Infections/metabolism , Vibrio/metabolism , Vibrio/pathogenicity , Actins/chemistry , Aeromonas/genetics , Animals , Bacterial Toxins/genetics , Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections/microbiology , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Humans , Vibrio/genetics , Vibrio Infections/microbiology , Virulence
6.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Jul 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39005411

ABSTRACT

Competition between bacterial species is a major factor shaping microbial communities. In this work, we explored the hypothesis that competition between bacterial pathogens can be mediated through antagonistic effects of bacterial effector proteins on host systems, particularly the actin cytoskeleton. Using Salmonella Typhimurium invasion into cells as a model, we demonstrate that invasion is inhibited if the host actin cytoskeleton is disturbed by any of the four tested actin-specific toxins: Vibrio cholerae MARTX actin crosslinking and Rho GTPase inactivation domains (ACD and RID, respectively), TccC3 from Photorhabdus luminescens, and Salmonella's own SpvB. We noticed that ACD, being an effective inhibitor of tandem G-actin binding assembly factors, is likely to inhibit the activity of another Vibrio effector, VopF. In reconstituted actin polymerization assays confirmed by live-cell microscopy, we confirmed that ACD potently halted the actin nucleation and pointed-end elongation activities of VopF, revealing competition between these two V. cholerae effectors. Together, the results suggest bacterial effectors from different species that target the same host machinery or proteins may represent an effective but largely overlooked mechanism of indirect bacterial competition in host-associated microbial communities. Whether the proposed inhibition mechanism involves the actin cytoskeleton or other host cell compartments, such inhibition deserves investigation and may contribute to a documented scarcity of human enteric co-infections by different pathogenic bacteria.

7.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Jan 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38352400

ABSTRACT

Arboviruses are a diverse group of insect-transmitted pathogens that pose global public health challenges. Identifying evolutionarily conserved host factors that combat arbovirus replication in disparate eukaryotic hosts is important as they may tip the balance between productive and abortive viral replication, and thus determine virus host range. Here, we exploit naturally abortive arbovirus infections that we identified in lepidopteran cells and use bacterial effector proteins to uncover host factors restricting arbovirus replication. Bacterial effectors are proteins secreted by pathogenic bacteria into eukaryotic hosts cells that can inhibit antimicrobial defenses. Since bacteria and viruses can encounter common host defenses, we hypothesized that some bacterial effectors may inhibit host factors that restrict arbovirus replication in lepidopteran cells. Thus, we used bacterial effectors as molecular tools to identify host factors that restrict four distinct arboviruses in lepidopteran cells. By screening 210 effectors encoded by seven different bacterial pathogens, we identify six effectors that individually rescue the replication of all four arboviruses. We show that these effectors encode diverse enzymatic activities that are required to break arbovirus restriction. We further characterize Shigella flexneri-encoded IpaH4 as an E3 ubiquitin ligase that directly ubiquitinates two evolutionarily conserved proteins, SHOC2 and PSMC1, promoting their degradation in insect and human cells. We show that depletion of either SHOC2 or PSMC1 in insect or human cells promotes arbovirus replication, indicating that these are ancient virus restriction factors conserved across invertebrate and vertebrate hosts. Collectively, our study reveals a novel pathogen-guided approach to identify conserved antimicrobial machinery, new effector functions, and conserved roles for SHOC2 and PSMC1 in virus restriction.

8.
Elife ; 122023 01 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36695568

ABSTRACT

Most of the cholesterol in the plasma membranes (PMs) of animal cells is sequestered through interactions with phospholipids and transmembrane domains of proteins. However, as cholesterol concentration rises above the PM's sequestration capacity, a new pool of cholesterol, called accessible cholesterol, emerges. The transport of accessible cholesterol between the PM and the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is critical to maintain cholesterol homeostasis. This pathway has also been implicated in the suppression of both bacterial and viral pathogens by immunomodulatory oxysterols. Here, we describe a mechanism of depletion of accessible cholesterol from PMs by the oxysterol 25-hydroxycholesterol (25HC). We show that 25HC-mediated activation of acyl coenzyme A: cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT) in the ER creates an imbalance in the equilibrium distribution of accessible cholesterol between the ER and PM. This imbalance triggers the rapid internalization of accessible cholesterol from the PM, and this depletion is sustained for long periods of time through 25HC-mediated suppression of SREBPs and continued activation of ACAT. In support of a physiological role for this mechanism, 25HC failed to suppress Zika virus and human coronavirus infection in ACAT-deficient cells, and Listeria monocytogenes infection in ACAT-deficient cells and mice. We propose that selective depletion of accessible PM cholesterol triggered by ACAT activation and sustained through SREBP suppression underpins the immunological activities of 25HC and a functionally related class of oxysterols.


Subject(s)
Oxysterols , Zika Virus Infection , Zika Virus , Animals , Humans , Mice , Oxysterols/metabolism , Acyltransferases/metabolism , Cholesterol/metabolism , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Bacteria/metabolism
9.
Curr Biol ; 28(10): 1536-1547.e9, 2018 05 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29731300

ABSTRACT

Delivery of bacterial toxins to host cells is hindered by host protective barriers. This obstruction dictates a remarkable efficiency of toxins, a single copy of which may kill a host cell. Efficiency of actin-targeting toxins is further hampered by an overwhelming abundance of their target. The actin cross-linking domain (ACD) toxins of Vibrio species and related bacterial genera catalyze the formation of covalently cross-linked actin oligomers. Recently, we reported that the ACD toxicity can be amplified via a multivalent inhibitory association of actin oligomers with actin assembly factors formins, suggesting that the oligomers may act as secondary toxins. Importantly, many proteins involved in nucleation, elongation, severing, branching, and bundling of actin filaments contain G-actin-binding Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein (WASP)-homology motifs 2 (WH2) organized in tandem and therefore may act as a multivalent platform for high-affinity interaction with the ACD-cross-linked actin oligomers. Using live-cell single-molecule speckle (SiMS) microscopy, total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy, and actin polymerization assays, we show that, in addition to formins, the oligomers bind with high affinity and potently inhibit several families of actin assembly factors: Ena/vasodilator-stimulated phosphorprotein (VASP); Spire; and the Arp2/3 complex, both in vitro and in live cells. As a result, ACD blocks the actin retrograde flow and membrane dynamics and disrupts association of Ena/VASP with adhesion complexes. This study defines ACD as a universal inhibitor of tandem-organized G-actin binding proteins that overcomes the abundance of actin by redirecting the toxicity cascade toward less abundant targets and thus leading to profound disorganization of the actin cytoskeleton and disruption of actin-dependent cellular functions.


Subject(s)
Actins/metabolism , Bacterial Toxins/metabolism , Vibrio cholerae/chemistry , Actin Cytoskeleton/metabolism , Actin-Related Protein 2-3 Complex/metabolism , Amino Acid Motifs , Microfilament Proteins/metabolism
10.
Science ; 349(6247): 535-9, 2015 Jul 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26228148

ABSTRACT

The actin cross-linking domain (ACD) is an actin-specific toxin produced by several pathogens, including life-threatening spp. of Vibrio cholerae, Vibrio vulnificus, and Aeromonas hydrophila. Actin cross-linking by ACD is thought to lead to slow cytoskeleton failure owing to a gradual sequestration of actin in the form of nonfunctional oligomers. Here, we found that ACD converted cytoplasmic actin into highly toxic oligomers that potently "poisoned" the ability of major actin assembly proteins, formins, to sustain actin polymerization. Thus, ACD can target the most abundant cellular protein by using actin oligomers as secondary toxins to efficiently subvert cellular functions of actin while functioning at very low doses.


Subject(s)
Actins/metabolism , Antigens, Bacterial/chemistry , Antigens, Bacterial/toxicity , Bacterial Toxins/chemistry , Bacterial Toxins/toxicity , Fetal Proteins/antagonists & inhibitors , Microfilament Proteins/antagonists & inhibitors , Nuclear Proteins/antagonists & inhibitors , Animals , Antigens, Bacterial/genetics , Bacterial Toxins/genetics , Cell Line , Formins , Intestinal Mucosa/drug effects , Intestinal Mucosa/metabolism , Polymerization/drug effects , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Rats
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