An obligate intracellular bacterial pathogen forms a direct, interkingdom membrane contact site.
Yamilex Acevedo-SánchezPatrick J WoidaStephan KraemerRebecca L LamasonPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
Interorganelle communication regulates cellular homeostasis through the formation of tightly-associated membrane contact sites 1-3 . Prior work has identified several ways that intracellular pathogens alter contacts between eukaryotic membranes 4-6 , but there is no existing evidence for contact sites spanning eukaryotic and prokaryotic membranes. Here, using a combination of live-cell microscopy and transmission and focused-ion-beam scanning electron microscopy, we demonstrate that the intracellular bacterial pathogen Rickettsia parkeri forms a direct membrane contact site between its bacterial outer membrane and the rough endoplasmic reticulum (ER), with tethers that are approximately 55 nm apart. Depletion of the ER-specific tethers VAPA and VAPB reduced the frequency of rickettsia-ER contacts, suggesting these interactions mimic organelle-ER contacts. Overall, our findings illuminate a direct, interkingdom membrane contact site uniquely mediated by rickettsia that seems to mimic traditional host MCSs.