生物
柠檬酸杆菌
肠致病性大肠杆菌
微生物学
毒力
效应器
病菌
三型分泌系统
分泌物
细菌粘附素
肠杆菌科
糖基化
大肠杆菌
免疫学
遗传学
基因
生物化学
作者
Lindsay Burns,Natalia Giannakopoulou,Lei Zhu,Yong Zhong Xu,Rufaida H. Khan,Sadjia Bekal,Erwin Schurr,T. Martin Schmeing,Samantha Gruenheid
摘要
Enterohaemorrhagic and enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EHEC and EPEC) are gastrointestinal pathogens responsible for severe diarrheal illness. EHEC and EPEC form "attaching and effacing" lesions during colonization and, upon adherence, inject proteins directly into host intestinal cells via the type III secretion system (T3SS). Injected bacterial proteins have a variety of functions, but generally alter host cell biology to favour survival and/or replication of the pathogen. Non-LEE-encoded effector A (NleA) is a T3SS-injected effector of EHEC, EPEC, and the related mouse pathogen Citrobacter rodentium. Studies in mouse models indicate that NleA has an important role in bacterial virulence. However, the mechanism by which NleA contributes to disease remains unknown. We have determined that following translocation into host cells, a serine and threonine rich region of NleA is modified by host-mediated mucin-type O-linked glycosylation. Surprisingly, this region was not present in several clinical EHEC isolates. When expressed in C. rodentium, a non-modifiable variant of NleA was indistinguishable from wildtype NleA in an acute mortality model but conferred a modest increase in persistence over the course of infection in mixed infections in C57BL/6J mice. This is the first known example of a bacterial effector being modified by host-mediated O-linked glycosylation. Our data also suggests that this modification may confer a selective disadvantage to the bacteria during in vivo infection.
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