Affiliation:
1. MRC Centre for Molecular Bacteriology and Infection, Department of Life Sciences, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom
2. Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Wellcome Trust Genome Campus, Hinxton, Cambridge, United Kingdom
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Strains of the various
Salmonella enterica
serovars cause gastroenteritis or typhoid fever in humans, with virulence depending on the action of two type III secretion systems (
Salmonella
pathogenicity island 1 [SPI-1] and SPI-2). SptP is a
Salmonella
SPI-1 effector, involved in mediating recovery of the host cytoskeleton postinfection. SptP requires a chaperone, SicP, for stability and secretion. SptP has 94% identity between
S. enterica
serovar Typhimurium and
S
. Typhi; direct comparison of the protein sequences revealed that
S
. Typhi SptP has numerous amino acid changes within its chaperone-binding domain. Subsequent comparison of Δ
sptP S
. Typhi and
S.
Typhimurium strains demonstrated that, unlike SptP in
S.
Typhimurium, SptP in
S
. Typhi was not involved in invasion or cytoskeletal recovery postinfection. Investigation of whether the observed amino acid changes within SptP of
S
. Typhi affected its function revealed that
S
. Typhi SptP was unable to complement
S.
Typhimurium Δ
sptP
due to an absence of secretion. We further demonstrated that while
S.
Typhimurium SptP is stable intracellularly within
S
. Typhi,
S
. Typhi SptP is unstable, although stability could be recovered following replacement of the chaperone-binding domain with that of
S.
Typhimurium. Direct assessment of the strength of the interaction between SptP and SicP of both serovars via bacterial two-hybrid analysis demonstrated that
S
. Typhi SptP has a significantly weaker interaction with SicP than the equivalent proteins in
S.
Typhimurium. Taken together, our results suggest that changes within the chaperone-binding domain of SptP in
S
. Typhi hinder binding to its chaperone, resulting in instability, preventing translocation, and therefore restricting the intracellular activity of this effector.
IMPORTANCE
Studies investigating
Salmonella
pathogenesis typically rely on
Salmonella
Typhimurium, even though
Salmonella
Typhi causes the more severe disease in humans. As such, an understanding of
S.
Typhi pathogenesis is lacking. Differences within the type III secretion system effector SptP between typhoidal and nontyphoidal serovars led us to characterize this effector within
S
. Typhi. Our results suggest that SptP is not translocated from typhoidal serovars, even though the loss of
sptP
results in virulence defects in
S.
Typhimurium. Although SptP is just one effector, our results exemplify that the behavior of these serovars is significantly different and genes identified to be important for
S.
Typhimurium virulence may not translate to
S
. Typhi.
Funder
Wellcome
RCUK | Medical Research Council
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
36 articles.
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