Chlamydial Effector Proteins Localized to the Host Cell Cytoplasmic Compartment
- 1 November 2008
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Infection and Immunity
- Vol. 76 (11) , 4842-4850
- https://doi.org/10.1128/iai.00715-08
Abstract
Disease-causing microbes utilize various strategies to modify their environment in order to create a favorable location for growth and survival. Gram-negative bacterial pathogens often use specialized secretion systems to translocate effector proteins directly into the cytosol of the eukaryotic cells they infect. These bacterial proteins are responsible for modulating eukaryotic cell functions. Identification of the bacterial effectors has been a critical step toward understanding the molecular basis for the pathogenesis of the bacteria that use them. Chlamydiae are obligate intracellular bacterial pathogens that have a type III secretion system believed to translocate virulence effector proteins into the cytosol of their host cells. Selective permeabilization of the eukaryotic cell membrane was used in conjunction with metabolic labeling of bacterial proteins to identify chlamydial proteins that localize within the cytosol of infected cells. More than 20Chlamydia trachomatisandC. pneumoniaeproteins were detected within the cytoplasmic compartment of infected cells. While a number of cytosolic proteins were shared, others were unique to each species, suggesting that variation among cytosolic chlamydial proteins contributes to the differences in the pathogenesis of the chlamydial species. The spectrum of chlamydial proteins exported differed concomitant with the progress of the developmental cycle. These data confirm that a dynamic relationship exists betweenChlamydiaand its host and that translocation of bacterial proteins into the cytosol is developmentally dependent.Keywords
This publication has 50 references indexed in Scilit:
- Localization of the Hypothetical Protein Cpn0797 in the Cytoplasm of Chlamydia pneumoniae -Infected Host CellsInfection and Immunity, 2006
- Secretion of Cpn0796 from Chlamydia pneumoniae into the host cell cytoplasm by an autotransporter mechanismCellular Microbiology, 2005
- History of the ADP/ATP-Translocase-Encoding Gene, a Parasitism Gene Transferred from a Chlamydiales Ancestor to Plants 1 Billion Years AgoApplied and Environmental Microbiology, 2003
- Restricted Fusion of Chlamydia trachomatis Vesicles with Endocytic Compartments during the Initial Stages of InfectionInfection and Immunity, 2003
- Resealing of large transmembrane pores produced by streptolysin O in nucleated cells is accompanied by NF‐κB activation and downstream eventsThe FASEB Journal, 2001
- Identification of a Chlamydial Protease–Like Activity Factor Responsible for the Degradation of Host Transcription FactorsThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2001
- Delivery of proteins into living cells by reversible membrane permeabilization with streptolysin-OProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2001
- Degradation of Transcription Factor Rfx5 during the Inhibition of Both Constitutive and Interferon γ–Inducible Major Histocompatibility Complex Class I Expression in Chlamydia-Infected CellsThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2000
- Macromolecular assembly and secretion across the bacterial cell envelope: type II protein secretion systemsJournal of Molecular Biology, 1998
- The projection structure of Perfringolysin O (Clostridium perfringens θ‐toxin)FEBS Letters, 1993