The bacterial toxin ExoU requires a host trafficking chaperone for transportation and to induce necrosis.
Vincent DeruelleStéphanie BouillotViviana JobEmmanuel TaillebourgMarie-Odile FauvarqueIna AttréePhilippe HuberPublished in: Nature communications (2021)
Pseudomonas aeruginosa can cause nosocomial infections, especially in ventilated or cystic fibrosis patients. Highly pathogenic isolates express the phospholipase ExoU, an effector of the type III secretion system that acts on plasma membrane lipids, causing membrane rupture and host cell necrosis. Here, we use a genome-wide screen to discover that ExoU requires DNAJC5, a host chaperone, for its necrotic activity. DNAJC5 is known to participate in an unconventional secretory pathway for misfolded proteins involving anterograde vesicular trafficking. We show that DNAJC5-deficient human cells, or Drosophila flies knocked-down for the DNAJC5 orthologue, are largely resistant to ExoU-dependent virulence. ExoU colocalizes with DNAJC5-positive vesicles in the host cytoplasm. DNAJC5 mutations preventing vesicle trafficking (previously identified in adult neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis, a human congenital disease) inhibit ExoU-dependent cell lysis. Our results suggest that, once injected into the host cytoplasm, ExoU docks to DNAJC5-positive secretory vesicles to reach the plasma membrane, where it can exert its phospholipase activity.
Keyphrases
- chronic kidney disease
- end stage renal disease
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- cystic fibrosis
- type iii
- genome wide
- single cell
- staphylococcus aureus
- dna methylation
- cell therapy
- intensive care unit
- ejection fraction
- acinetobacter baumannii
- gene expression
- mesenchymal stem cells
- newly diagnosed
- heat shock protein
- drug resistant
- immune response
- oxidative stress
- brain injury