| Literature DB >> 19144561 |
Abstract
Diarrhoeal disease caused by enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) is dependent on a delivery system that injects numerous bacterial 'effector' proteins directly into host cells. The best-described EPEC effectors are encoded together on the locus of enterocyte effacement (LEE) pathogenicity island and display high levels of multifunctionality and cooperativity within the host cell. More recently, effectors encoded outside the LEE (non-LEE effectors) have been discovered and their functions are beginning to be uncovered. The recent completion of the EPEC genome sequence suggests its effector repertoire consists of at least 21 effector proteins. Here, we describe the genomic location of effectors and discuss recent advances made on effector cellular function as well as their role in the infection process.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19144561 PMCID: PMC2697328 DOI: 10.1016/j.mib.2008.11.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Opin Microbiol ISSN: 1369-5274 Impact factor: 7.934
The effector repertoire of EPEC 2348/69 and known functional characteristics of effector proteins.
| EPEC effector | Island location | Cellular/physiological functions | Subcellular target sites | Proposed host partners | Functional motifs | Homologue family |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tir | LEE | Actin polymerisation | Plasma membrane | IQGAP1 | SH3-binding domains | None known |
| TJ disruption | Cytoplasm | 14-3-3tau | GAP motif | |||
| Cell detachment | Nck | Phos. sites | ||||
| Microvilli effacement | α-Actinin | |||||
| SGLT-1 inactivation | Talin | |||||
| PLCγ phosphorylation | Cortactin | |||||
| Regulating effector activity | Vinculin | |||||
| Invasion non-polarised cells | Cytokeratin 18 | |||||
| Map | LEE | TJ disruption | Mitochondria | EBP50/ | PDZ1-binding domain | IpgB2 |
| Filopodia formation | Actin | NHERF1 | MTS | |||
| Mitochondrial dysfunction | Cytoplasm | WxxxE | ||||
| Microvilli effacement | ||||||
| SGLT-1 inactivation | ||||||
| Invasion non-polarised cells | ||||||
| EspB | LEE | Anti-phagocytosis | Cytoplasm | Antitrypsin | YopD | |
| Microvilli effacement | Plasma membrane | α-Catenin | ||||
| Actin disruption | Myosin | |||||
| Pore formation | ||||||
| EspF | LEE | Apoptosis | Mitochondria, cytoplasm | ABCF2 | PRR, | None known except other EspF variants such as EspF(U) |
| TJ disruption | Apical and lateral membranes | Actin | SH3 | |||
| Microvilli effacement | TJ region | ZO-1/ZO-2 | N-WASP and SNX9 binding domains | |||
| Microvilli elongation | Profilin | MTS | ||||
| SGLT-1 inactivation | Arp2/3 | |||||
| Mitochondrial dysfunction | Cytokeratin18 | |||||
| Pedestal maturation | Sorting nexin 9 | |||||
| Inhibition of NHE3 activity | N-WASP | |||||
| Membrane remodelling | 14-3-3 | |||||
| Aquaporin redistribution | Mito protein | |||||
| N-WASP activation | ||||||
| EspH | LEE | Modulating actin dynamics | Pedestals | None known | ||
| Cytoskeleton disruption | Plasma membrane | |||||
| EspZ | LEE | Unknown | Pedestals | None known | ||
| EspG | LEE | Microtubule disruption | Microtubule colocalisation | Tubulin | VirA | |
| TJ disruption | ||||||
| Paracellular permeability | ||||||
| Aquaporin redistribution | ||||||
| Stress fibres formation | ||||||
| DRA transporter inhibition | ||||||
| NleH1 | PP2 | Pro-inflammatory | OspG | |||
| EspJ | PP2 | Anti-phagocytosis | None known | |||
| NleB2 | PP4 | Unknown | None known | |||
| NleC | PP4 | Unknown | AIP56 | |||
| NleD | PP4 | Unknown | HopAP1, HopH1 | |||
| NleG | PP4 | Unknown | None | |||
| NleH2 | PP6 | Pro-inflammatory | OspG | |||
| NleF | PP6 | Unknown | None | |||
| NleA | PP6 | Inhibition of protein secretion by interference | Golgi | Sec24 | PDZ1 | None known |
| (EspI) | with COPII | PDZK11 | ||||
| SNX27 | ||||||
| MAlS3 | ||||||
| TCOF1 | ||||||
| NleE2 | IE2 | PMN transepithelial migration | Nucleus | OspZ | ||
| EspG2/Orf3 | IE5 | As with EspG | VirA | |||
| NleB1 | IE6 | Unknown | None known | |||
| NleE1 | IE6 | PMN trans-epithelial migration | Nucleus | OspZ | ||
| EspL2 | IE6 | Unknown | OspD | |||
| EspL1 | IE2 | Pseudogene (see | ||||
| NleB3 | IE2 | Pseudogene (see | ||||
| EspO | PP6 | Pseudogene (see | ||||
| Cif | PP2 | Pseudogene (see | ||||
| NleH3 | PP4 | Pseudogene (see | ||||
The predicted set of EPEC effectors comprises 21 full-length genes and at least 5 identified pseudogenes (i.e. genes truncated by stop codons, missing start codons, containing frameshift mutations). Where more than one copy of an effector exists, genes are numbered in accordance with sequence comparison to known EHEC homologues. For example, the full-length gene EspL is more similar to EHEC EspL2, whilst the EspL pseudogene corresponds with EspL1 and is named accordingly. All effectors are found on the chromosome in pathogenicity islands specified in [6] and illustrated in Figure 3. We have attempted to include all the known and documented effector functions and the known subcellular locations from published sources. ‘Homologue family’ gives an example of a known homologue from an effector family; where indicated as ‘none known’ this does not discount similarities with unassigned hypothetical proteins. Island location is illustrated in Figure 3 in accordance with [6]. All other references can be found in the text or in [3]. Phos, phosphorylation; MTS, mitochondrial targeting sequence; PRR, proline-rich repeat; SH3, src homology domains; PMN, polymorphonuclear; TJ, tight junction; IQGAP, IQ motif containing GTPase activating protein; EBP50/NHERF1, Na+/H+ exchanger regulating factor 1; ezrin–radixin–moesin, ERM-binding phosphoprotein of 50 kDa.
We have attempted to include all the known and documented effector functions and the known subcellular locations from unpublished sources.
‘Functional motifs’ and ‘proposed host partners’ correspond to those that have been proved to have functional significance, although in some cases, data from yeast two-hybrid protein–protein interactions are included as in [49,50].
Photobacterium virulence protein.
Pseudomonas syringae effector proteins.
Also has Shiglella enterotoxin homology.
Figure 1The complexity of EPEC effector function. The multifunctional and overlapping properties of the EPEC effectors are depicted here by grouping effector functions together. Three effectors have anti-phagocytic activities (shown here using the phagocytic-like gut-associated antigen presenting M-cells) whilst at least five effectors act on microvilli and four inhibit SGLT-1 and other transporter activity, four disrupt tight junctions and three are involved in pedestal and filopodia formation. At least three Nle effectors are also involved in inflammatory pathways. Microtubule and Golgi/ER disruption appears to be specific to EspG/Orf3 and NleA, respectively. Also shown are effectors which have known actin-modulating properties. TJ, tight junctions; MT, microtubules; AqP, aquaporins; NHE3, sodium hydrogen exchanger; Cl/OH, Cl−/OH− transporter; SGLT-1, sodium glucose cotransporter-1; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; MV, microvilli.
Figure 2The modular nature of multifunctional LEE effector proteins. Tir, Map and EspF are the best-studied EPEC effectors and have been implicated in subverting multiple cellular processes. These proteins possess many eukaryotic-like motifs with many being assigned to elicit specific host cellular responses. Only those motifs/domains with proven and documented functions within the host cell are shown whilst chaperone binding sites or the N-terminal bacterial secretion and translocation signals are not shown. Other EPEC effectors are not shown because of the paucity of information regarding their functional domains. See text for abbreviations.
Figure 3The six identified non-LEE effector encoding pathogenicity islands of EPEC E2348/69. Predicted effector genes were identified by mining the EPEC genome using over 400 known/predicted effector sequences. The identified effectors and genomic islands support the genome sequence published data (see text), from which the genomic island names were obtained. Only those genomic regions encoding the effectors and with low %GC content (graph above each island) are shown with most prophage-related genes surrounding these regions omitted. Genes and strand direction are shown by individual arrows which are drawn to scale within each island and colour coded (see inset). Multiple copies of genes are numbered according to close homologues in EHEC as explained in the legend to Table 1. Pseudogene key: (a) Cif; C-terminally truncated protein not produced or secreted in this EPEC strain [48]; (b) NleH3; C-terminal truncated; (c) NleO; no start codon; (d) EspL1; stop codon in middle of gene; (e) NleB3; N-terminal truncated.