The impact of plasma membrane lipid composition on flagella-mediated adhesion of enterohemorrhagicEscherichia coli

Author:

Cazzola Hélène,Lemaire Laurine,Acket Sébastien,Prost Elise,Duma Luminita,Erhardt Marc,Čechová Petra,Trouillas Patrick,Mohareb Fady,Rossi Claire,Rossez Yannick

Abstract

AbstractEnterohemorrhagicEscherichia coli(EHEC) O157:H7 is a major cause of foodborne gastrointestinal illness. The adhesion of EHEC on host tissues is the first step enabling bacterial colonization. Adhesins like fimbriae and flagella mediate this mechanism. Here, we studied the interaction of the bacterial flagellum with the host cell’s plasma membrane using Giant Unilamellar Vesicles (GUVs) as a biologically relevant model. Cultured cell lines contain many different molecular components including proteins and glycoproteins. In contrast, with GUVs we can characterize the bacterial mode of interaction solely with a defined lipid part of the cell membrane. Bacterial adhesion on GUVs was dependent on the presence of the flagellar filament and its motility. By testing different phospholipid head groups, the nature of the fatty acid chains or the liposome curvature, we found that lipid packing is a key parameter to enable bacterial adhesion. Using HT-29 cells grown in the presence of polyunsaturated fatty acid (α-linolenic acid) or saturated fatty acid (palmitic acid), we found that α-linolenic acid reduced adhesion of wild type EHEC but not of a non-flagellated mutant. Finally, our results reveal that the presence of flagella is advantageous for the bacteria to bind to lipid rafts. We speculate that polyunsaturated fatty acids prevent flagellar adhesion on membrane bilayers and play a clear role for optimal host colonization. Flagella-mediated adhesion to plasma membranes has broad implications to host-pathogen interactions.ImportanceBacterial adhesion is a crucial step to allow bacteria to colonize their hosts, invade tissues and form biofilm. EnterohemorrhagicE. coliO157:H7 is a human pathogen and the causative agent of diarrhea and hemorrhagic colitis. Here, we use biomimetic membrane models and cell lines to decipher the impact of lipid content of the plasma membrane on enterohemorrhagic E.coliflagella-mediated adhesion. Our findings provide evidence that polyunsaturated fatty acid (α-linolenic acid) inhibits E.coliflagella adhesion to the plasma membrane in a mechanism separate from its antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory functions. In addition, we confirm that cholesterol-enriched lipid microdomains, often called lipid rafts are important in bacterial adhesion. These findings significantly strengthen plasma membrane adhesion via bacterial flagella in an important human pathogen. This mechanism represents a promising target for the development of novel anti-adhesion therapies.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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