AI Article Synopsis

  • Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium utilizes the outer membrane protein PagN for cell invasion, with PagN being conserved across various Salmonella species.
  • The study demonstrated that PagN is essential for facilitating the binding and invasion of non-invasive E. coli and beads coated with PagN into non-phagocytic cells, indicating the protein's crucial role in this process.
  • The findings highlight that PagN-mediated invasion requires cooperation between heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) and β1 integrin, along with the importance of tyrosine phosphorylation and specific kinases in triggering this internalization mechanism.

Article Abstract

Background: Salmonella can invade host cells via a type three secretion system called T3SS-1 and its outer membrane proteins, PagN and Rck. However, the mechanism of PagN-dependent invasion pathway used by Salmonella enterica, subspecies enterica serovar Typhimurium remains unclear.

Results: Here, we report that PagN is well conserved and widely distributed among the different species and subspecies of Salmonella. We showed that PagN of S. Typhimurium was sufficient and necessary to enable non-invasive E. coli over-expressing PagN and PagN-coated beads to bind to and invade different non-phagocytic cells. According to the literature, PagN is likely to interact with heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) as PagN-mediated invasion could be inhibited by heparin treatment in a dose-dependent manner. This report shows that this interaction is not sufficient to allow the internalization mechanism. Investigation of the role of β1 integrin as co-receptor showed that mouse embryo fibroblasts genetically deficient in β1 integrin were less permissive to PagN-mediated internalization. Moreover, PagN-mediated internalization was fully inhibited in glycosylation-deficient pgsA-745 cells treated with anti-β1 integrin antibody, supporting the hypothesis that β1 integrin and HSPG cooperate to induce the PagN-mediated internalization mechanism. In addition, use of specific inhibitors and expression of dominant-negative derivatives demonstrated that tyrosine phosphorylation and class I phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase were crucial to trigger PagN-dependent internalization, as for the Rck internalization mechanism. Finally, scanning electron microscopy with infected cells showed microvillus-like extensions characteristic of Zipper-like structure, engulfing PagN-coated beads and E. coli expressing PagN, as observed during Rck-mediated internalization.

Conclusions: Our results supply new comprehensions into T3SS-1-independent invasion mechanisms of S. Typhimurium and highly indicate that PagN induces a phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase signaling pathway, leading to a Zipper-like entry mechanism as the Salmonella outer membrane protein Rck.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8140442PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12866-021-02187-1DOI Listing

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