Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular Bacteriology, Research Institute for Microbial Diseases, Osaka University, Suita, Osaka, Japan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Bordetella pertussis
,
Bordetella bronchiseptica
, and
Bordetella parapertussis
share highly homologous virulence factors and commonly cause respiratory infections in mammals; however, their host specificities and disease severities differ, and the reasons for this remain largely unknown. Adenylate cyclase toxin (CyaA) is a homologous virulence factor that is thought to play crucial roles in
Bordetella
infections. We herein demonstrate that CyaAs function as virulence factors differently between
B. bronchiseptica
/
B. parapertussis
and
B. pertussis
.
B
.
bronchiseptica
CyaA bound to target cells, and its enzyme domain was translocated into the cytosol similarly to
B
.
pertussis
CyaA. The hemolytic activity of
B
.
bronchiseptica
CyaA on sheep erythrocytes was also preserved. However, in nucleated target cells,
B
.
bronchiseptica
CyaA was phosphorylated at Ser
375
, which constitutes a motif (RSXpSXP [pS is phosphoserine]) recognized by the host factor 14-3-3, resulting in the abrogation of adenylate cyclase activity. Consequently, the cytotoxic effects of
B
.
bronchiseptica
CyaA based on its enzyme activity were markedly attenuated.
B
.
parapertussis
CyaA carries the 14-3-3 motif, indicating that its intracellular enzyme activity is abrogated similarly to
B
.
bronchiseptica
CyaA; however,
B
.
pertussis
CyaA has Phe
375
instead of Ser, and thus, was not affected by 14-3-3. In addition,
B
.
pertussis
CyaA impaired the barrier function of epithelial cells, whereas
B
.
bronchiseptica
CyaA did not. Rat infection experiments suggested that functional differences in CyaA are related to differences in pathogenicity between
B. bronchiseptica
/
B
.
parapertussis
and
B. pertussis
.
IMPORTANCE
Bordetella pertussis
,
B. bronchiseptica
, and
B. parapertussis
are bacterial respiratory pathogens that are genetically close to each other and produce many homologous virulence factors; however, their host specificities and disease severities differ, and the reasons for this remain unknown. Previous studies attempted to explain these differences by the distinct virulence factors produced by each
Bordetella
species. In contrast, we indicated functional differences in adenylate cyclase toxin, a homologous virulence factor of
Bordetella
. The toxins of
B. bronchiseptica
and presumably
B. parapertussis
were inactivated by the host factor 14-3-3 after phosphorylation in target cells, whereas the
B. pertussis
toxin was not inactivated because of the lack of the phosphorylation site. This is the first study to show that 14-3-3 inactivates the virulence factors of pathogens. The present results suggest that pathogenic differences in
Bordetella
are attributed to the different activities of adenylate cyclase toxins.
Funder
MEXT | Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology