Arkaprabha Banerjee, Kaylee R Jacobs, Yihui Wang, Emma H Doud, Evelyn Toh, Barry D Stein, Amber L Mosley, Guangming Zhong, Richard P Morrison, Sandra G Morrison, Shuai Hu, Julie A Brothwell, David E Nelson
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引用次数: 0
摘要
尾特异性蛋白酶(Tsp)是分布广泛的丝氨酸蛋白酶家族的成员,通常以革兰氏阴性细菌中的周质蛋白为靶标并对其进行处理。必须在细胞内存在的革兰氏阴性衣原体编码一种高度保守的 Tsp 同源物,但其靶标和功能尚不清楚。我们发现了一个tsp无义突变的鼠衣原体突变体。tsp突变体的基本体在37°C时延迟分化为无性网状体,在40°C时完全受阻。Tsp 定位于 C. muridarum 细胞,但在包涵体外未检测到,这表明它的靶标是衣原体蛋白而不是宿主蛋白。在野生型和tsp突变体基本体中,关键衣原体外膜复合体和毒力相关蛋白的丰度不同,这与Tsp调节发育周期进展的可能性一致。衣原体结构和毒力因子丰度的改变可以解释为什么突变体在小鼠阴道内感染模型中高度减弱,而与野生型tsp的同源重组体则没有。因此,衣原体 Tsp 在体外是基本体及时分化为网状体所必需的,在体内则是一个重要的毒力因子。
Tail-specific protease is an essential Chlamydia virulence factor that mediates the differentiation of elementary bodies into reticulate bodies.
Tail-specific proteases (Tsp) are members of a widely distributed family of serine proteases that commonly target and process periplasmic proteins in Gram-negative bacteria. The obligately intracellular, Gram-negative Chlamydia encode a highly conserved Tsp homolog whose target and function are unclear. We identified a Chlamydia muridarum mutant with a nonsense mutation in tsp. Differentiation of the tsp mutant elementary bodies into vegetative reticulate bodies was delayed at 37°C and completely blocked at 40°C. Tsp localized to C. muridarum cells but was not detected outside the inclusion, suggesting that it targets chlamydial rather than host proteins. The abundance of key chlamydia outer membrane complex and virulence-related proteins differed in wild-type and tsp mutant elementary bodies, consistent with the possibility that Tsp regulates developmental cycle progression. The altered abundances of chlamydial structural and virulence factors could explain why the mutant, but not an isogenic recombinant with wild-type tsp, was highly attenuated in a mouse intravaginal infection model. Thus, chlamydial Tsp is required for timely differentiation of elementary bodies into reticulate bodies in vitro and is an essential virulence factor in vivo.
期刊介绍:
Infection and Immunity (IAI) provides new insights into the interactions between bacterial, fungal and parasitic pathogens and their hosts. Specific areas of interest include mechanisms of molecular pathogenesis, virulence factors, cellular microbiology, experimental models of infection, host resistance or susceptibility, and the generation of innate and adaptive immune responses. IAI also welcomes studies of the microbiome relating to host-pathogen interactions.