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1.
J Biol Chem ; 276(36): 34035-40, 2001 Sep 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11440999

ABSTRACT

The bacterial enteropathogen Salmonella typhimurium employs a specialized type III secretion system to inject toxins into host cells, which trigger signaling cascades leading to cell death in macrophages, secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines, or rearrangements of the host cell cytoskeleton and thus to bacterial invasion. Two of the injected toxins, SopE and the 69% identical protein SopE2, are highly efficient guanine nucleotide exchange factors for the RhoGTPase Cdc42 of the host cell. However, it has been a puzzle why S. typhimurium might employ two toxins with redundant function. We hypothesized that SopE and SopE2 might have different specificities for certain host cellular RhoGTPases. In vitro guanine nucleotide exchange assays and surface plasmon resonance measurements revealed that SopE is an efficient guanine nucleotide exchange factor for Cdc42 and Rac1, whereas SopE2 was interacting efficiently only with Cdc42, but not with Rac1. Affinity precipitation of Cdc42.GTP and Rac1.GTP from lysates and characteristic cytoskeletal rearrangements of infected tissue culture cells confirmed that SopE is highly efficient at activating Cdc42 and Rac1 in vivo, whereas SopE2 was efficiently activating Cdc42, but not Rac1. We conclude that the translocated effector proteins SopE and SopE2 allow S. typhimurium to specifically activate different sets of RhoGTPase signaling cascades.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/physiology , Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factors/physiology , Salmonella typhimurium/chemistry , rho GTP-Binding Proteins/chemistry , Cells, Cultured , Cytoskeleton/metabolism , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Endothelium, Vascular/cytology , Enzyme Activation , Glutathione Transferase/metabolism , Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factors/metabolism , Humans , Kinetics , Macrophages/microbiology , Protein Binding , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Spectrometry, Fluorescence , Surface Plasmon Resonance , Time Factors , Umbilical Veins/cytology , cdc42 GTP-Binding Protein/metabolism , rac1 GTP-Binding Protein/metabolism
2.
J Bacteriol ; 183(7): 2348-58, 2001 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11244077

ABSTRACT

Salmonella spp. possess a conserved type III secretion system encoded within the pathogenicity island 1 (SPI1; centisome 63), which mediates translocation of effector proteins into the host cell cytosol to trigger responses such as bacterial internalization. Several translocated effector proteins are encoded in other regions of the Salmonella chromosome. It remains unclear how this complex chromosomal arrangement of genes for the type III apparatus and the effector proteins emerged and how the different effector proteins cooperate to mediate virulence. By Southern blotting, PCR, and phylogenetic analyses of highly diverse Salmonella spp., we show here that effector protein genes located in the core of SPI1 are present in all Salmonella lineages. Surprisingly, the same holds true for several effector protein genes located in distant regions of the Salmonella chromosome, namely, sopB (SPI5, centisome 20), sopD (centisome 64), and sopE2 (centisomes 40 to 42). Our data demonstrate that sopB, sopD, and sopE2, along with SPI1, were already present in the last common ancestor of all contemporary Salmonella spp. Analysis of Salmonella mutants revealed that host cell invasion is mediated by SopB, SopE2, and, in the case of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium SL1344, by SopE: a sopB sopE sopE2-deficient triple mutant was incapable of inducing membrane ruffling and was >100-fold attenuated in host cell invasion. We conclude that host cell invasion emerged early during evolution by acquisition of a mosaic of genetic elements (SPI1 itself, SPI5 [sopB], and sopE2) and that the last common ancestor of all contemporary Salmonella spp. was probably already invasive.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Genes, Bacterial , Salmonella/genetics , Salmonella/pathogenicity , Animals , Cell Line , Chromosome Mapping , Macrophages/immunology , Mice , Phylogeny
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