Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology1 and
2. Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine,2 University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky 40292
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Legionella pneumophila
causes Legionnaires’ disease by replication in alveolar macrophages and monocytes. The bacteria are internalized most efficiently by opsonin-dependent, CR3-mediated phagocytosis. This investigation focused on determining the role of actin polymerization and phosphorylation signals in this uptake mechanism. Uptake inhibition assays and confocal microscopic analysis indicated that entry of
L. pneumophila
activated tyrosine kinase (TK) and protein kinase C (PKC) and induced actin polymerization at the site of bacterial entry. Upon
L. pneumophila
entry, six major cellular proteins (75, 71, 59, 56, 53, and 52 kDa) were TK phosphorylated in soluble fractions of monocytes, and three of these proteins (52, 53, and 56 kDa) were consistently found in insoluble (i.e., cytoskeletal) fractions of monocytes as well. Tyrosine phosphorylation was suppressed when cells were pretreated with the kinase inhibitor genistein, tyrphostin, or staurosporine. A similar tyrosine-phosphorylated protein pattern was observed with CR3-mediated entry of avirulent
L. pneumophila
,
Escherichia coli
, or zymosan into monocytes. This study has shown that PKC and TK signals which activate actin polymerization during the process of phagocytosis are induced upon
L. pneumophila
entry. In addition, CR3 receptor-mediated phagocytosis into monocytes may involve tyrosine phosphorylation of similar proteins, regardless of the particle being phagocytosed. Therefore, the tyrosine-induced phosphorylation observed during opsonized
L. pneumophila
entry is not a virulence-associated event.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
36 articles.
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