| Literature DB >> 22069606 |
Michel R Popoff1, Bernard Poulain.
Abstract
Toxins are potent molecules used by various bacteria to interact with a host organism. Some of them specifically act on neuronal cells (clostridial neurotoxins) leading to characteristics neurological affections. But many other toxins are multifunctional and recognize a wider range of cell types including neuronal cells. Various enterotoxins interact with the enteric nervous system, for example by stimulating afferent neurons or inducing neurotransmitter release from enterochromaffin cells which result either in vomiting, in amplification of the diarrhea, or in intestinal inflammation process. Other toxins can pass the blood brain barrier and directly act on specific neurons.Entities:
Keywords: actin cytoskeleton; enterotoxin; nervous system; neurotoxin; neurotransmitter; small gtpases; toxin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 22069606 PMCID: PMC3153206 DOI: 10.3390/toxins2040683
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Bacterial neurotoxins and other toxins interacting with the nervous system.
| Toxin | Bacteria | Structure | Target neuronal cell | Receptor | Activity | Effects | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Botulinum neurotoxins | single chain protein (150 kDa) | motoneurons | gangliosides (GD1b, GT1b) | proteolysis of SNARE proteins (VAMP, SNAP25, syntaxin) | inhibiton of acetylcholine release (flaccid paralysis) | 0.0003 | |
| synaptotagmin, SV2 | |||||||
| Tetanus neurotoxin | single chain protein (150 kDa) | inhibitory interneurons | gangliosides (GD1b, GT1b) | proteolysis of SNARE protein (VAMP) | inhibition of neurotransmitter release (GABA, glycine) (spastic paralysis) | 0.001 | |
| GPI-anchored protein | |||||||
| Lethal toxin | single chain protein (250 kDa) | potentially all neurons | unknown | inactivation of Rho and Ras-GTPases (glucosylation) | inhibition of neurotransmitter release | 0.1 | |
| Toxin B | single chain protein (250 kDa) | potentially all neurons | unknown | inactivation of Rho-GTPases (glucosylation) | inhibition of neurotransmitter release | 32 | |
| Pneumolysin | single chain protein (53 kDa) | hippocampal neurons | cholesterol | pore-forming activity | neuronal apoptosis (meningitis) | ||
| Enterotoxin | single chain protein (36 kDa) | enterocyte neurons | pore-forming activity | 80 | |||
| Epsilon toxin | single chain protein (36 kDa) | hippocampal neurons | unknown | pore-forming activity | stimulation of glutamate release (excitation) | 0.1 | |
| Cholera toxin | AB5 structure | enterochrompaffin cells and enteric neurons | ganglioside GM1 | inactivation of Gsα and activation of adenylate cyclase | 5-HT release (diarrhea) | 250 | |
| Heat labile enterotoxin | AB5 structure | enterochromaffin cells and enteric neurons | ganglioside GM1 | inactivation of Gsα and activation of adenylate cyclase | 5-HT release (diarrhea) | 250 | |
| Toxin A | single chain protein (300 kDa) | enterocytes enteric neurons | membrane glycoprotein | inactivation of Rho-GTPases, other mechanism? | release of inflammatory mediators and neuropeptides (diarrhea) | 0.35 | |
| Heat stable enterotoxin | short peptide (2–5 kDa) | enterocyte enteric neurons? | guanylate cyclase | GMPc increase,other mechanism? | stimulation of enteric nervous system(diarrhea) | ||
| Staphylococcal enterotoxins | single chain protein (25–30 kDa) | enterochromaffin cells, vagal nerve | histocompatibility complex class II molecules | superantigen other mechanism? | 5-HT release stimulation of 5-HT3 receptor (emesis) | 20 (monkey) | |
| Cereulide | cyclic dodecadepsipeptide (1.2 kDa) | vagal nerve | 5HT3 receptor | K+ ionophore | stimulation of 5-HT3 receptor (emesis) | ||
1Mouse lethal doses per kg of body weight according to [1,2,3,4].
Figure 1Schematic representation of bacterial toxins active on the nervous system.
Clostridial neurotoxins block the release of many different neurotransmitters and other molecules in neuronal and in some non-neuronal cells. However, the release of certain neurotransmitters is resistant to BoNTs, either the target cells do not express the specific receptor(s) for BoNT entry or the intracellular target (SNARE protein) do not contain BoNT cleavage site.
| Neurotransmitter | Model system | References |
|---|---|---|
| Acetylcholine (ACh) | Skeletal muscular junction | [ |
| Torpedo electric organ | [ | |
| Aplysia, CNS | [ | |
| Glutamate | Brain synaptosome | [ |
| Hind paw/mass spectrometry | [ | |
| Cultured rat cerebellar neurons/radioassay | [ | |
| Cultured rat cerebellar neurons/enzymatic assay | [ | |
| Aspartate | Brain synaptosomes | [ |
| Gamma aminobutyric acid (GABA) | Brain synaptosomes | [ |
| Glycine | Spinal cord neurons (culture) | [ |
| Dopamine | Brain synaptosomes | [ |
| Adrenalin | ||
| Noradrenalin | ||
| Serotonin (or 5-HT) | Brain synaptosomes | [ |
| ATP corelease with ACh | Torpedo synaptosomes | [ |
| Rat bladder urothelium | [ | |
| Guinea pig stellate neurons | [ | |
| Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) | Canine mesenteric artery | [ |
| Human urinary bladder detrusor muscle | [ | |
| Substance P (SP) | Inhibition of KCl evoked SP release | |
| Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) | Inhibition of release in cultured dorsal root ganglia (DRG) neurons | [ |
| Inhibition of release in cultured rat bigeninal nerve cells | [ | |
| Rat bladder afferent neurons | [ | |
| Upregulation and increase of CGRP | [ | |
| Vaso intestinal peptide (VIP), CGRP | Periglandular innervation of sweat glands | [ |
| Neuropeptide Y | Vasoconstrictor neurons afferent to vena cava and uterine artery from guinea pig | [ |
| SP | Capsain evoked release from cultured DRG | [ |
| Nitric oxide (NO) Ach | Non vesicular fraction of 5-HT evoked ACh release at bronchiolar smooth muscle (ACh release by epithelial cells ?) | [ |
| GABA | Cultured inhibitory hippocampal interneurons (BoNT-resistant SNAP25 related isoform ?) | [ |
| Catecholamines | Chromaffin cells | [ |
| ATP, glutamate | Glial cells: astrocytes or Schwann cells | [ |
| Insulin | Pancreatic beta-cells | [ |
| Store-mediated Ca++ entry | Exocrine pancreas cells | [ |
| Store-mediated Ca++ entry | Platelets | [ |
| Glycine | Cat, rat spinal cord | [ |
| Murine spinal cord cell cultures (complete blockage of evoked and spontaneous release) | [ | |
| GABA | Rat brain | [ |
| Pig cerebrocortical synaptosomes | [ | |
| Rat hippocampal slices | [ | |
| Cerebellar cell cultures | [ | |
| Glutamate | Murine spinal cord cell cultures (partial blockage of evoked release and increase in spontaneous release) | [ |
| Rat brain | [ | |
| Cerebellar neuronal cells | [ | |
| Pig cerebrocortical synaptosomes | [ | |
| Cultured hippocampal neurons (blockage of AMPA receptor insertion | [ | |
| Synaptosomes | [ | |
| Aspartate | Pig cerebrocortical synaptosomes | [ |
| Brain synaptosomes | [ | |
| Brain slices | [ | |
| Synaptosomes (no inhibition of evoked aspartate release) | [ | |
| Catecholamines | Cultured brain neurons | [ |
| Chromaffin cells | [ | |
| Synaptosomes | [ | |
| Rat brain | ||
| Serotonin | Rat brain | [ |
| Synaptosomes | [ | |
| Synaqptosomes (inhibition of serotonin uptake) | [ | |
| Acetylcholine | Chromaffin PC12 cells | [ |
| Synaptosomes | [ | |
| Aplysia californica neurons (intraneural injection) | [ | |
| Met-enkephalin | Pig cerebrocortical synaptosomes | [ |
| Glutamate | Astrocytes | [ |
| Transferrin receptor | CHO cell (cleavage of cellubrevin) | [ |
Figure 2Schematic representation of the molecular mechanism of evoked neuroexocytosis and of toxin-dependent inhibition of neurotransmitter release. Clostridial neurotoxins are assumed to enter neuronal cells via synaptic vesicle recycling or by classical receptor-dependent endocytosis like C. sordellii LT. Acidification of the endosomal lumen triggers the translocation of the catalytic domain (L chain of clostridial neurotoxins or N-terminal domain of LT) into the cytosol. Synaptic vesicles loaded with neurotransmitter move from a reserve zone to the “active zone” in a close proximity to the release sites through an actin filament-dependent manner. Synaptic vesicles association with release sites is first driven by interaction of the vesicular GTPase Rab3 with the plasma membrane-associated protein Rim (tethering). Subsequent activation of Munc18, which triggers the de-chaperonning of syntaxin, leads to SNARE complex assembly (priming/docking). Ca++ entry is sensed by synpatotagmin and triggers the fusion event and release of neurotransmitter through Rac-PLD1 activation. Clostridial neurotoxin L chains have access to the cleavage sites of SNARE proteins when the SNARE proteins are dissociated (physiological window). Cleavage of SNAP25 by BoNT/A or BoNT/C, SNARE complex formation still occurs. But, the release of the C-terminal domain of SNAP25 impairs the interaction between SNAP25 and Ca++ to synaptotagmin thus preventing the fusion. Truncation of SNAP25 by BoNT/E or VAMP by BoNT/B, BoNT/D, BoNT/F or TeNT destabilizes or leads to non functional SNARE complexes. LT acts differently by glucosylating and thus inactivating Rac and subsequently preventing the PLD1 production of fusogenic phosphatidic acid.
Figure 3.Schematic model of the neuronal reflex controlling the intestinal secretion and alteration by enterotoxins. Cholera toxin (CT) triggers the release of serotonin (5-HT) from enterochromaffin cells, mainly located in intestinal crypts, which stimulates enterocyte secretion through 5-HT2 receptors and activates afferent sensory neurons through 5-HT3, 5-HT4 receptors. The neuronal signal is relayed through the submucosal and myenteric plexuses leading to activation of secretomotor neurons including acetylcholine (ACh) and vaso-intestinal peptide (VIP) neurons. ACh stimulates M2 receptors on enterocytes and VIP recognizes specific enterocyte receptors. The neuronal-dependent intestinal secretion is negatively regulated by noradrenergic and enkephalinergic neurons. C. difficile ToxA stimulates primary sensory neurons leading to the release of substance P (SP) and calcitonin gene-related protein (CGRP) and subsequently causing intestinal secretion and inflammation. ToxA first interacts with intestinal epithelial cells causing actin cytoskeleton alteration and release of cytokines, which are probably the stimulators of primary sensory neurons. In addition, ToxA attenuates the inhibitory response of noradrenergic and enkephalinergic neurons. The precise ToxA pathway permitting its interaction with the enteric nervous system is not yet known.