Blowing epithelial cell bubbles with GumB: ShlA-family pore-forming toxins induce blebbing and rapid cellular death in corneal epithelial cells.
Kimberly M BrothersJake D CallaghanNicholas A StellaJulianna M BachinskyMohammed AlHigaylanKara L LehnerJonathan M FranksKira L LathropElliot CollinsDeanna M SchmittJoseph HorzempaRobert M Q ShanksPublished in: PLoS pathogens (2019)
Medical devices, such as contact lenses, bring bacteria in direct contact with human cells. Consequences of these host-pathogen interactions include the alteration of mammalian cell surface architecture and induction of cellular death that renders tissues more susceptible to infection. Gram-negative bacteria known to induce cellular blebbing by mammalian cells, Pseudomonas and Vibrio species, do so through a type III secretion system-dependent mechanism. This study demonstrates that a subset of bacteria from the Enterobacteriaceae bacterial family induce cellular death and membrane blebs in a variety of cell types via a type V secretion-system dependent mechanism. Here, we report that ShlA-family cytolysins from Proteus mirabilis and Serratia marcescens were required to induce membrane blebbling and cell death. Blebbing and cellular death were blocked by an antioxidant and RIP-1 and MLKL inhibitors, implicating necroptosis in the observed phenotypes. Additional genetic studies determined that an IgaA family stress-response protein, GumB, was necessary to induce blebs. Data supported a model where GumB and shlBA are in a regulatory circuit through the Rcs stress response phosphorelay system required for bleb formation and pathogenesis in an invertebrate model of infection and proliferation in a phagocytic cell line. This study introduces GumB as a regulator of S. marcescens host-pathogen interactions and demonstrates a common type V secretion system-dependent mechanism by which bacteria elicit surface morphological changes on mammalian cells. This type V secretion-system mechanism likely contributes bacterial damage to the corneal epithelial layer, and enables access to deeper parts of the tissue that are more susceptible to infection.
Keyphrases
- cell death
- cell surface
- oxidative stress
- transcription factor
- gene expression
- candida albicans
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- single cell
- signaling pathway
- biofilm formation
- dna methylation
- staphylococcus aureus
- cystic fibrosis
- genome wide
- electronic health record
- escherichia coli
- wound healing
- binding protein
- klebsiella pneumoniae
- artificial intelligence
- urinary tract infection
- loop mediated isothermal amplification