Anaplasma phagocytophilum effector EgeA facilitates infection by hijacking TANGO1 and SCFD1 from ER–Golgi exit sites to pathogen-occupied inclusions

Author:

Wang Lidan1,Lin Mingqun1ORCID,Hou Libo1,Rikihisa Yasuko1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Veterinary Biosciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Infectious Diseases Institute, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210

Abstract

The obligatory intracellular bacterium Anaplasma phagocytophilum causes human granulocytic anaplasmosis, an emerging zoonosis. Anaplasma has limited biosynthetic and metabolic capacities, yet it effectively replicates inside of inclusions/vacuoles of eukaryotic host cells. Here, we describe a unique Type IV secretion system (T4SS) effector, E R– G olgi e xit site protein of A naplasma (EgeA). In cells infected by Anaplasma , secreted native EgeA, EgeA-GFP, and the C-terminal half of EgeA (EgeA-C)-GFP localized to Anaplasma- containing inclusions. In uninfected cells, EgeA-C-GFP localized to cis-Golgi, whereas the N-terminal half of EgeA-GFP localized to the ER. Pull-down assays identified EgeA-GFP binding to a transmembrane protein in the ER, Transport and Golgi organization protein 1 (TANGO1). By yeast two-hybrid analysis, EgeA-C directly bound Sec1 family domain-containing protein 1 (SCFD1), a host protein of the cis-Golgi network that binds TANGO1 at ER–Golgi exit sites (ERES). Both TANGO1 and SCFD1 localized to the Anaplasma inclusion surface. Furthermore, knockdown of Anaplasma EgeA or either host TANGO1 or SCFD1 significantly reduced Anaplasma infection. TANGO1 and SCFD1 prevent ER congestion and stress by facilitating transport of bulky or unfolded proteins at ERES. A bulky cargo collagen and the ER-resident chaperon BiP were transported into Anaplasma inclusions, and several ER stress marker genes were not up-regulated in Anaplasma- infected cells. Furthermore, EgeA transfection reduced collagen overexpression-induced BiP upregulation. These results suggest that by binding to the two ERES proteins, EgeA redirects the cargo-adapted ERES to pathogen-occupied inclusions and reduces ERES congestion, which facilitates Anaplasma nutrient acquisition and reduces ER stress for Anaplasma survival and proliferation.

Funder

HHS | NIH | NIAID | Division of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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