Enterohaemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) is an important food-borne pathogen that, upon infection, causes destruction of the microvilli brush border of intestinal cells. EHEC is able to recruit several host cell proteins and induce actin accumulation beneath its adherence site, forming a pedestal-like structure upon which the bacterium is firmly attached. Injection of bacterial effectors into the host cells is required to trigger the recruitment and activation of proteins, such as cortactin, neural Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein (N-WASP) and Arp2/3 complex, directly involved in the actin polymerization process. We found that cortactin, an actin-binding protein, has a pivotal role during pedestal formation by EHEC. Cortactin was found to bind directly to two important virulence factors of EHEC, Tir and EspF(u), which are translocated into the host cells during infection. Binding of cortactin to these effectors is dependent upon tyrosine phosphorylation and a balance between tyrosine phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of cortactin is required to regulate pedestal formation by EHEC.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1462-5822.2007.00913.xDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

tyrosine phosphorylation
12
enterohaemorrhagic escherichia
8
escherichia coli
8
host cells
8
pedestal formation
8
formation ehec
8
cortactin
6
ehec
5
phosphorylation controls
4
controls cortactin
4

Similar Publications

Cancer cell overexpresses numerus proteins, however, how these up-regulated proteins, especially those enzymatically opposite kinases and phosphatases, act together to promote oncogenesis is unknown. Here, we reported that protein tyrosine phosphatase H1 (PTPH1) is a scaffold protein for receptor tyrosine kinase (HER2) to potentiate breast tumorigenesis. PTPH1 utilizes its PDZ domain to bind HER2, p38γ, PBK, and YAP1 and to increase HER2 nuclear translocation, stemness, and oncogenesis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

STAT5B is a vital transcription factor for lymphocytes. Here, function of two STAT5B mutations from human T cell leukemias: one substituting tyrosine 665 with phenylalanine (STAT5B ), the other with histidine (STAT5B ) was interrogated. modeling predicted divergent energetic effects on homodimerization with a range of pathogenicity.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Unlabelled: SHP1 (PTPN6) and SHP2 (PTPN11) are closely related protein-tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs), which are autoinhibited until their SH2 domains bind paired tyrosine-phosphorylated immunoreceptor tyrosine-based inhibitory/switch motifs (ITIMs/ITSMs). These PTPs bind overlapping sets of ITIM/ITSM-bearing proteins, suggesting that they might have some redundant functions. By studying T cell-specific single and double knockout mice, we found that SHP1 and SHP2 redundantly restrain naïve T cell differentiation to effector and central memory phenotypes, with SHP1 playing the dominant role.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Mitochondrial dysfunction mediated by c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) plays an important role in lipotoxic liver injury in nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). This study aims to investigate the pharmacological mechanism of Jiangzhi Granule (JZG), a Chinese herbal formula against NASH, with a focus on its regulation of JNK signaling-mediated mitochondrial function.

Methods: Hepatocytes were induced by palmitic acid (PA) for 24 h to establish an in vitro lipotoxic model, which was simultaneously treated with either JZG or vehicle control.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

SH2B1β is a multifunctional scaffold protein that modulates cytoskeletal processes such as cellular motility and neurite outgrowth. To identify novel SH2B1β-interacting proteins involved in these processes, a yeast two-hybrid assay was performed. The C-terminal 159 residues of the cytoskeleton structural protein, βIIΣ1-spectrin, interacted with the N-terminal 260 residues of SH2B1β, a region implicated in SH2B1β enhancement of cell motility and localization at the plasma membrane.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!