Cell Vacuolation Caused by Vibrio cholerae Hemolysin

Author:

Figueroa-Arredondo Paula123,Heuser John E.4,Akopyants Natalia S.1,Morisaki J. Hiroshi4,Giono-Cerezo Silvia2,Enrı́quez-Rincón Fernando3,Berg Douglas E.1

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Molecular Microbiology and of Genetics1 and

2. Departamento de Microbiologı́a, Escuela Nacional de Ciencias Biológicas del IPN, Carpio y Plan de Ayala, México, D.F. 11340,2 and

3. Departamento de Biologı́a Celular, CINVESTAV-IPN, México, D.F. 07360,3 Mexico

4. Department of Cell Biology,4 Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110, and

Abstract

ABSTRACT Non-O1 strains of Vibrio cholerae implicated in gastroenteritis and diarrhea generally lack virulence determinants such as cholera toxin that are characteristic of epidemic strains; the factors that contribute to their virulence are not understood. Here we report that at least one-third of diarrhea-associated nonepidemic V. cholerae strains from Mexico cause vacuolation of cultured Vero cells. Detailed analyses indicated that this vacuolation was related to that caused by aerolysin, a pore-forming toxin of Aeromonas ; it involved primarily the endoplasmic reticulum at early times (∼1 to 4 h after exposure), and resulted in formation of large, acidic, endosome-like multivesicular vacuoles (probably autophagosomes) only at late times (∼16 h). In contrast to vacuolation caused by Helicobacter pylori VacA protein, that induced by V. cholerae was exacerbated by agents that block vacuolar proton pumping but not by endosome-targeted weak bases. It caused centripetal redistribution of endosomes, reflecting cytoplasmic alkalinization. The gene for V. cholerae vacuolating activity was cloned and was found to correspond to hlyA , the structural gene for hemolysin. HlyA protein is a pore-forming toxin that causes ion leakage and, ultimately, eukaryotic cell lysis. Thus, a distinct form of cell vacuolation precedes cytolysis at low doses of hemolysin. We propose that this vacuolation, in itself, contributes to the virulence of V. cholerae strains, perhaps by perturbing intracellular membrane trafficking or ion exchange in target cells and thereby affecting local intestinal inflammatory or other defense responses.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology

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