Affiliation:
1. IRSD, Université de Toulouse, INSERM, INRA, ENVT, UPS, Toulouse, France
2. Toxalim, INRA, Toulouse, France
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Colibactins are hybrid polyketide-nonribosomal peptides produced by
Escherichia coli
,
Klebsiella pneumoniae
, and other
Enterobacteriaceae
harboring the
pks
genomic island. These genotoxic metabolites are produced by
pks
-encoded peptide-polyketide synthases as inactive prodrugs called precolibactins, which are then converted to colibactins by deacylation for DNA-damaging effects. Colibactins are bona fide virulence factors and are suspected of promoting colorectal carcinogenesis when produced by intestinal
E. coli
. Natural active colibactins have not been isolated, and how they induce DNA damage in the eukaryotic host cell is poorly characterized. Here, we show that DNA strands are cross-linked covalently when exposed to enterobacteria producing colibactins. DNA cross-linking is abrogated in a
clbP
mutant unable to deacetylate precolibactins or by adding the colibactin self-resistance protein ClbS, confirming the involvement of the mature forms of colibactins. A similar DNA-damaging mechanism is observed
in cellulo
, where interstrand cross-links are detected in the genomic DNA of cultured human cells exposed to colibactin-producing bacteria. The intoxicated cells exhibit replication stress, activation of ataxia-telangiectasia and Rad3-related kinase (ATR), and recruitment of the DNA cross-link repair Fanconi anemia protein D2 (FANCD2) protein. In contrast, inhibition of ATR or knockdown of FANCD2 reduces the survival of cells exposed to colibactin-producing bacteria. These findings demonstrate that DNA interstrand cross-linking is the critical mechanism of colibactin-induced DNA damage in infected cells.
IMPORTANCE
Colorectal cancer is the third-most-common cause of cancer death. In addition to known risk factors such as high-fat diets and alcohol consumption, genotoxic intestinal
Escherichia coli
bacteria producing colibactin are proposed to play a role in colon cancer development. Here, by using transient infections with genotoxic
E. coli
, we showed that colibactins directly generate DNA cross-links
in cellulo
. Such lesions are converted into double-strand breaks during the repair response. DNA cross-links, akin to those induced by metabolites of alcohol and high-fat diets and by widely used anticancer drugs, are both severely mutagenic and profoundly cytotoxic lesions. This finding of a direct induction of DNA cross-links by a bacterium should facilitate delineating the role of
E. coli
in colon cancer and engineering new anticancer agents.
Funder
Agence Nationale de la Recherche
Institut National Du Cancer
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
170 articles.
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