Interaction of the Salmonella Typhimurium effector protein SopB with host cell Cdc42 is involved in intracellular replication.

Mol Microbiol

Departamento de Microbiología II, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, and Instituto Ramón y Cajal de Investigaciones Sanitarias (IRYCIS), Plaza de Ramón y Cajal s/n, 28040-Madrid, Spain.

Published: June 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • SopB/SigD is an effector protein in Salmonella that helps the bacteria invade cells and survive inside them by interacting with the host's small GTPase Cdc42.
  • The study reveals that SopB can bind to both active and inactive forms of Cdc42, independent of its phosphatase function, highlighting its role in bacterial adaptation.
  • Mutations in SopB that disrupt its interaction with Cdc42 lead to reduced localization within the Salmonella-containing vacuole and decreased efficiency in intracellular replication, though they do not affect the initial invasion of host cells.

Article Abstract

The phosphoinositide phosphatase SopB/SigD is a type III secretion system effector that plays multiple roles in Salmonella internalization and intracellular survival. We previously reported that SopB complexed with and inhibited the small GTPase Cdc42 when expressed in a yeast model system, independently of its phosphatase activity. Here we show that human Cdc42, but not Rac1, interacts with catalytically inactive SopB when coexpressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. This interaction occurs with both constitutively active and non-activatable Cdc42, suggesting that SopB binds Cdc42 independently of its activation state. By mutational analysis we have narrowed the Cdc42-interacting region of SopB to the first 142 amino acids, and isolated a collection of point mutations in this region, mainly affecting leucine residues conserved in the related Shigella IpgD protein. Such mutations yielded SopB unable to interact with Cdc42 but maintained phosphatase activity. SopB mutant proteins defective for binding Cdc42 were ubiquitinated upon translocation in mammalian cells, but their localization to the Salmonella-containing vacuole was reduced compared with wild-type SopB. Whereas invasion of mammalian cells by Salmonella bearing these sopB mutations was not affected, intracellular replication was less efficient, suggesting that SopB-Cdc42 interaction contributes to the adaptation of Salmonella to the intracellular environment.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2958.2011.07639.xDOI Listing

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