Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Legionella pneumophila
, the causative agent of Legionnaires' disease, expresses a type IVB secretion apparatus that translocates bacterial proteins into amoeba and macrophage hosts. When stationary-phase cultures are used to infect hosts, the type IVB apparatus encoded by the
icm
/
dot
genes is required for entry, delay of phagosome-lysosome fusion, and intracellular multiplication within host cells. Null mutants with mutations in
icm
/
dot
genes are defective in these phenotypes. Here a new model is described in which hosts are infected with stationary-phase cultures that have been incubated overnight in pH 6.5 buffer. This model is called Ers treatment because it enhances the resistance to acid, hydrogen peroxide, and antibiotic stress beyond that of stationary-phase cultures. Following Ers treatment entry into amoeba and macrophage hosts does not require
dotA
, which is essential for
Legionella
virulence phenotypes when hosts are infected with stationary-phase cultures,
dotB
,
icmF
,
icmV
, or
icmX
. Defective host entry is also suppressed for null mutants with mutations in the KatA and KatB catalase-peroxidase enzymes, which are required for proper intracellular growth in amoeba and macrophage hosts. Ers treatment-induced suppression of defective entry is not associated with increased bacterial adhesion to host cells or with morphological changes in the bacterial envelope but is dependent on protein expression during Ers treatment. By using proteomic analysis, Ers treatment was shown to induce a protein predicted to contain eight tetratricopeptide repeats, a motif previously implicated in enhanced entry of
L. pneumophila
. Characterization of Ers treatment-dependent changes in expression is proposed as an avenue for identifying
icm
/
dot
-independent factors that function in the entry of
Legionella
into amoeba and macrophage hosts.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
33 articles.
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