Bordetella pertussis causes whooping cough, a respiratory infectious disease that is the fifth largest cause of vaccine-preventable death in infants. Though historically considered an extracellular pathogen, this bacterium has been detected both in vitro and in vivo inside phagocytic and non-phagocytic cells. However the precise mechanism used by B. pertussis for cell entry, or the putative bacterial factors involved, are not fully elucidated. Here we find that adenylate cyclase toxin (ACT), one of the important toxins of B. pertussis, is sufficient to promote bacterial internalisation into non-phagocytic cells. After characterization of the entry route we show that uptake of "toxin-coated bacteria" proceeds via a clathrin-independent, caveolae-dependent entry pathway, allowing the internalised bacteria to survive within the cells. Intracellular bacteria were found inside non-acidic endosomes with high sphingomyelin and cholesterol content, or "free" in the cytosol of the invaded cells, suggesting that the ACT-induced bacterial uptake may not proceed through formation of late endolysosomes. Activation of Tyr kinases and toxin-induced Ca(2+)-influx are essential for the entry process. We hypothesize that B. pertussis might use ACT to activate the endocytic machinery of non-phagocytic cells and gain entry into these cells, in this way evading the host immune system.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep13774 | DOI Listing |
bioRxiv
December 2024
Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, School of Medicine, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA.
is the gram-negative bacterium responsible for plague, one of the deadliest and most feared diseases in human history. This bacterium is known to infect phagocytic cells, such as dendritic cells and macrophages, but interactions with non-phagocytic cells of the adaptive immune system are frequently overlooked despite the importance they likely hold for human infection. To discover human genetic determinants of infection, we utilized nearly a thousand genetically diverse lymphoblastoid cell lines in a cellular genome-wide association study method called Hi-HOST (High-throughput Human in-vitrO Susceptibility Testing).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPathogens
November 2024
College of Veterinary Medicine, Xinjiang Agricultural University, Urumqi 830052, China.
() is capable of causing pneumonia, arthritis, mastitis, and various other ailments in cattle of all age groups, posing a significant threat to the healthy progression of the worldwide cattle industry. The invasion of non-phagocytic host cells serves as a pivotal mechanism enabling to evade the immune system and penetrate mucosal barriers, thereby promoting its spread. To investigate the differences in invasion into four types of non-phagocytic cells (Madin-Darby bovine kidney (MDBK) cells, embryonic bovine lung (EBL) cells, bovine embryo tracheal (EBTr) cells and bovine turbinate (BT) cells) and further elucidate its invasion mechanism, this study first optimized the experimental methods for invasion into cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBull Tokyo Dent Coll
December 2024
Department of Internal Medicine, Tokyo Dental College, Ichikawa General Hospital.
Talanta
January 2025
Department of Urology, Tianjin Institute of Urology, The Second Hospital of Tianjin Medical University, Tianjin, 300211, China. Electronic address:
The deformability and uptake capability of cells are critical indicators of their biomechanical properties and functional behaviors, particularly in tumor heterogeneity and cancer research. Here, we introduce a microfluidic flow cytometry platform integrated with a laterally adjustable squeezing structure for the characterization of bladder tumor cells (including 5637 and EJ cell lines) and uroepithelial cells (SV-HUC-1 cell line). The deformability of these cell types under varying channel width conditions was clearly assessed using this platform.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicroorganisms
September 2024
Faculty of Science and Engineering, The University of Greenwich at Medway, Central Avenue, Chatham Maritime, Kent ME4 4TB, UK.
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