The gram-negative bacterium Legionella pneumophila causes a severe form of pneumonia called Legionnaires' disease, characterized by bacterial replication within alveolar macrophages. Prior to intracellular replication, the vacuole harboring the bacterium must first escape trafficking to the host lysosome, a process that is dependent on the Dot/Icm type IV secretion system. To identify genes required for intracellular growth, bacterial mutants were isolated that were delayed in escape from the macrophage but which retain a minimally functional Dot/Icm machinery. The mutations were found in eight distinct genes, including three genes known to be required for optimal intracellular growth. Two of these genes, icmF and dotU, are located at one end of a cluster of genes that encode the type IV secretion system, yet both icmF and dotU lack orthologs in other type IV translocons. DotU protein is degraded in the early postexponential phase in wild-type L. pneumophila and at all growth phases in an icmF mutant. IcmF contains an extracytoplasmic domain(s) based on accessibility to a membrane-impermeant amine-reactive reagent. In the absence of either gene, L. pneumophila targets inappropriately to LAMP-1-positive compartments during macrophage infection, is defective in the formation of replicative vacuoles, and is impaired in the translocation of the effector protein SidC. Therefore, although IcmF and DotU do not appear to be part of the core type IV secretion system, these proteins are necessary for an efficiently functioning secretion apparatus.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC517542 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/IAI.72.10.5972-5982.2004 | DOI Listing |
bioRxiv
March 2023
Division of Biology and Biological Engineering, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, USA.
The Dot/Icm type IV secretion system (T4SS) delivers effector proteins into host cells during infection. Despite its significance as a potential drug target, our current understanding of its atomic structure is limited to isolated subcomplexes. In this study, we used subtomogram averaging and integrative modeling to construct a nearly-complete model of the Dot/Icm T4SS accounting for seventeen protein components.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Microbiol
July 2019
Division of Biology and Biological Engineering, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, USA.
Legionella pneumophila survives and replicates inside host cells by secreting ~300 effectors through the defective in organelle trafficking (Dot)/intracellular multiplication (Icm) type IVB secretion system (T4BSS). Here, we used complementary electron cryotomography and immunofluorescence microscopy to investigate the molecular architecture and biogenesis of the Dot/Icm secretion apparatus. Electron cryotomography mapped the location of the core and accessory components of the Legionella core transmembrane subcomplex, revealing a well-ordered central channel that opens into a large, windowed secretion chamber with an unusual 13-fold symmetry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Fish Dis
June 2019
Key Laboratory of Healthy Mariculture for the East China Sea, Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries College, Jimei University, Xiamen, China.
Survival in host macrophages is an effective strategy for pathogenic bacteria to spread. Aeromonas hydrophila has been found to survive in fish macrophages, but the mechanisms remain unknown. In this paper, the roles and possible mechanisms of IcmF in bacterial survival in fish macrophages were investigated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Microbiol
August 2018
State Key Laboratory Breeding Base for Zhejiang Sustainable Pest and Disease Control, Institute of Plant Protection and Microbiology, Zhejiang Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Hangzhou, 310021, China.
Acidovorax oryzae (Ao) cause bacterial brown stripe in rice that result in great economic loss. However, the pathogenic mechanism of this rice bacterial pathogen still remains unclear. Interestingly, transcriptomic and proteomic analysis of in vivo infection indicate that the pathogenicity of Ao strain RS-1 may be associated with the type six secretion system (T6SS), which was identified by in silico comparative genomic analysis in our previous studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
August 2012
Clinical Bacteriology, Department of Clinical Microbiology, and Laboratory for Molecular Infection Medicine Sweden, Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden.
The Gram-negative bacterium Francisella tularensis causes tularemia, a disease which requires bacterial escape from phagosomes of infected macrophages. Once in the cytosol, the bacterium rapidly multiplies, inhibits activation of the inflammasome and ultimately causes death of the host cell. Of importance for these processes is a 33-kb gene cluster, the Francisella pathogenicity island (FPI), which is believed to encode a type VI secretion system (T6SS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!