| Literature DB >> 23800426 |
Vesna Memisević1, Nela Zavaljevski, Rembert Pieper, Seesandra V Rajagopala, Keehwan Kwon, Katherine Townsend, Chenggang Yu, Xueping Yu, David DeShazer, Jaques Reifman, Anders Wallqvist.
Abstract
Burkholderia mallei is an infectious intracellular pathogen whose virulence and resistance to antibiotics makes it a potential bioterrorism agent. Given its genetic origin as a commensal soil organism, it is equipped with an extensive and varied set of adapted mechanisms to cope with and modulate host-cell environments. One essential virulence mechanism constitutes the specialized secretion systems that are designed to penetrate host-cell membranes and insert pathogen proteins directly into the host cell's cytosol. However, the secretion systems' proteins and, in particular, their host targets are largely uncharacterized. Here, we used a combined in silico, in vitro, and in vivo approach to identify B. mallei proteins required for pathogenicity. We used bioinformatics tools, including orthology detection and ab initio predictions of secretion system proteins, as well as published experimental Burkholderia data to initially select a small number of proteins as putative virulence factors. We then used yeast two-hybrid assays against normalized whole human and whole murine proteome libraries to detect and identify interactions among each of these bacterial proteins and host proteins. Analysis of such interactions provided both verification of known virulence factors and identification of three new putative virulence proteins. We successfully created insertion mutants for each of these three proteins using the virulent B. mallei ATCC 23344 strain. We exposed BALB/c mice to mutant strains and the wild-type strain in an aerosol challenge model using lethal B. mallei doses. In each set of experiments, mice exposed to mutant strains survived for the 21-day duration of the experiment, whereas mice exposed to the wild-type strain rapidly died. Given their in vivo role in pathogenicity, and based on the yeast two-hybrid interaction data, these results point to the importance of these pathogen proteins in modulating host ubiquitination pathways, phagosomal escape, and actin-cytoskeleton rearrangement processes.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23800426 PMCID: PMC3820922 DOI: 10.1074/mcp.M113.029041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cell Proteomics ISSN: 1535-9476 Impact factor: 5.911
Primers, plasmids, and strains used in the mouse aerosol challenge model experiment. Kmr, kanamycin resistant. Kms, kanamycin sensitive. Pmr, polymyxin B resistant. Pms, polymyxin B sensitive
| Primer, plasmid, or strain | Relevant characteristics | Source or reference |
|---|---|---|
| Primers | ||
| 0728-up | 5′- | This study |
| 0728-dn | 5′- | This study |
| 1865-up | 5′- | This study |
| 1865-dn | 5′- | This study |
| 0553-up | 5′- | This study |
| 0553-dn | 5′- | This study |
| Plasmids | ||
| pCR2.1-TOPO | 3,931-bp TA vector; pMB1 | Invitrogen |
| pCR2.1-0728 | pCR2.1-TOPO containing 298-bp PCR product generated with 0728-up and 0728-dn | This study |
| pCR2.1-1865 | pCR2.1-TOPO containing 297-bp PCR product generated with 1865-up and 1865-dn | This study |
| pCR2.1-0553 | pCR2.1-TOPO containing 535-bp PCR product generated with 0553-up and 0553-dn | This study |
| pEXKm5 | Mobilizabile | ( |
| pEXKm5-0728 | pEXKm5 derivative containing | This study |
| pEXKm5-1865 | pEXKm5 derivative containing | This study |
| pEXKm5-0553 | pEXKm5 derivative containing | This study |
| TOP10 | General cloning and blue/white screening | Invitrogen |
| S17-1 | Mobilizing strain with transfer genes of RP4 integrated on chromosome; | ( |
| ATCC 23344 | Type strain, isolated in 1944 from a human case of glanders; | ( |
| DDA0728 | ATCC 23344 derivative with pEXKm5–0728 integrated into the chromosome; | This study |
| DDA1865 | ATCC 23344 derivative with pEXKm5–1865 integrated into the chromosome; | This study |
| DDA0553 | ATCC 23344 derivative with pEXKm5–0553 integrated into the chromosome; | This study |
Fig. 1.The combined We used bioinformatics tools to identify 49 proteins putatively involved in virulence. These proteins were then screened for interaction partners using yeast two-hybrid (Y2H) assays against whole human and whole murine proteome libraries. We mapped the identified host-pathogen protein-protein interactions (PPIs) to host pathways and host PPI networks. The host proteins interacting with Burkholderia mallei proteins were characterized with respect to their functions and possible role in pathogenicity. This analysis resulted in the identification of a three promising virulence factor candidates. We verified that mutants lacking these proteins showed attenuated virulence in a mouse aerosol challenge model. Finally, we used all obtained data to delineate mechanisms of pathogenicity and generated hypotheses about the potential roles of these three proteins in B. mallei invasion of the host cell.
Strains of Burkholderia mallei used to identify proteins overrepresented in the pathogenic strains
| Genome | Size, Mb | PATRIC coding sequences | RefSeq coding sequences | Finished | Pathogenic |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5.83 | 5724 | 5024 | Yes | Yes | |
| 5.74 | 5591 | 5510 | Yes | Yes | |
| 5.88 | 5850 | 5276 | No | Yes | |
| 5.62 | 5614 | 5456 | No | Yes | |
| 5.23 | 5095 | 5189 | Yes | No | |
| 5.51 | 5590 | 4847 | No | No | |
| 5.84 | 5717 | 5852 | Yes | Attenuated |
This column shows the number of coding sequences for each of the genomes that are available in the PATRIC database (53).
This column shows the number of coding sequences available in the National Center for Biotechnology Information Reference Sequence database (54).
List of proteins selected for experimental yeast two-hybrid evaluation. *Proteins that have been experimentally linked to a particular secretion system. Genes associated with secretion system are classified according to their secretion system type and chromosomal locations
| Group | Locus tag | Protein name | Secretion system | Successfully cloned | Number of PPIs detected | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human | Murine | Conserved | |||||
| BMAA0410* | VgrG | 6/c3 | Yes | ||||
| BMAA0445* | VgrG | 6/c2 | Yes | 2 | 1 | ||
| BMAA0446* | VgrG | 6/c2 | Yes | 7 | 7 | ||
| BMAA0737* | VgrG | 6/c1 | No | ||||
| BMAA1901* | VgrG | 6/c4 | Yes | ||||
| BMAA0749* | BimA | 5 | Yes | 80 | 199 | 5 | |
| BMA0278* | PilA | - | Yes | 42 | 64 | 2 | |
| BMAA0079* | PlcN | 2 | Yes | ||||
| BMAA1521* | BopA | 3 | Yes | 1 | 1 | ||
| BMAA1523* | BopE | 3 | Yes | 27 | |||
| BMAA1525* | BapB | 3 | Yes | 9 | 13 | ||
| BMAA1528* | BipD | 3 | Yes | 41 | 49 | 3 | |
| BMAA1530* | BipC | 3 | Yes | 2 | |||
| BMAA1531* | BipB | 3 | Yes | 24 | 25 | 1 | |
| BMA0855* | VgrG Rhs domain | 6 | No | ||||
| BMAA1269 | VgrG | 6 | Yes | 1 | 1 | ||
| BMAA1538* | BsaU | 3 | Yes | 14 | 42 | 1 | |
| BMAA0729* | TssM | 6/c1 | Yes | 2 | |||
| BMA2097 | Hypothetical protein | 3 | Yes | ||||
| BMAA1865 | Hypothetical protein | 3 | Yes | 61 | 89 | 6 | |
| BMAA1899 | Hypothetical protein | 3 | No | ||||
| BMA0666 | CysD-1 | 3 | Yes | 3 | |||
| BMAA1487 | Methyl-accepting chemotaxis protein | 3 | No | ||||
| BMA3281 | FliF | 3 | Yes | 42 | 43 | 1 | |
| BMA1750 | HrpA | 3 | Yes | ||||
| BMAA0728 | TssN | 3 | Yes | 72 | 87 | 3 | |
| BMA2787 | IpgF | 3 | Yes | ||||
| BMA0267 | Pseudogene | - | Yes | 10 | 4 | 1 | |
| BMAA0038 | Hypothetical protein | - | Yes | ||||
| BMAA1662 | Response regulator | 3 | Yes | 19 | |||
| BMA0429 | Cmk | 3 | Yes | 63 | 58 | 4 | |
| BMA2469 | Tkt | 3 | Yes | 24 | 6 | ||
| BMAA0238 | Hypothetical protein | 2 | Yes | 25 | 28 | 2 | |
| BMAA1173 | Hypothetical protein | - | Yes | ||||
| BMA0886 | AcpA | 2 | No | ||||
| BMAA1618 | Hypothetical protein | 3 | Yes | ||||
| BMAA1619 | Hypothetical protein | 3 | Yes | 14 | 9 | 1 | |
| BMAA0679 | Chemotaxis protein CheC | - | Yes | 7 | |||
| BMAA0553 | Ser/Thr protein phosphatase | 2 | Yes | 59 | 60 | 3 | |
| BMAA1559 | Thermolysin metallopeptidase | 2 | Yes | ||||
| BMAA0582 | Hypothetical protein | 3 | Yes | ||||
| BMAA1566 | Serine-type carboxypeptidase | 3 | Yes | ||||
| BMAA1641 | Hypothetical protein | 3 | Yes | ||||
| BMAA0605 | Hypothetical protein | 3 | Yes | ||||
| BMAA1111 | Hypothetical protein | 3 | No | ||||
| BMAA1648 | Hypothetical protein | 3 | Yes | 9 | |||
| BMAA1997 | Phosphatidylserine decarboxylase | 3 | Yes | ||||
| BMAA2052 | Polysaccharide deacetylase | 3 | Yes | ||||
| BMAA0418 | NAD-dependent deacetylase | 3 | Yes | ||||
Gene located within the loci of a type 6 secretion system (T6SS) clusters (cluster 1 [c1]: BMAA0744-0729, cluster 2 [c2]: BMAA0438-0455, cluster 3 [c3]: BMAA0396-0412, and cluster 4 [c4]: BMAA1897-1915) (13).
Type 5 secretion system effector (auto-transporter), located adjacent to T6SS c1.
Predicted phospholipase, a putative type 2 secretion system (T2SS) effector (60).
Gene located within the locus of the type 3 secretion system (T3SS) (animal pathogen): BMAA1520-1552 (14).
T6SS-associated effector not located in any known or annotated T6SS cluster.
T3SS-predicted effector not located in any known or annotated T3SS.
Predicted as a T3SS effector, but located adjacent to T6SS c1.
Predicted to be secreted by the general Sec pathway and therefore possibly related to the type 2 secretion system.
Protein located within the locus of the putative plant-pathogenicity-associated T3SS: BMAA1617–1640 (61).
Fig. 2.Y2H host-pathogen protein–protein interactions. Our yeast two-hybrid (Y2H) assays against whole human and murine proteome libraries identified 600 protein–protein interactions (PPIs) between 21 B. mallei proteins and 409 human proteins (A) and 846 PPIs between 24 B. mallei proteins and 574 murine proteins (B). Green nodes represent B. mallei proteins, whereas purple and red nodes represent host proteins. There are 33 conserved interactions between these two data sets (red edges), i.e. in 33 PPIs, human proteins (red nodes in A) interacted with the same B. mallei proteins as their murine orthologs (red nodes in B).
Fig. 3.Mouse aerosol challenge model results. In the first set of experiments, 40 BALB/c mice (10 mice for each of the three B. mallei mutants + 10 mice exposed to the wild-type strain) received inhalation doses of ≥2 × 104 colony-forming units (cfu), corresponding to ≥10 LD50 for the wild-type strain. In the second set of experiments, additional 40 BALB/c mice received inhalation doses of ≥2 × 105 cfu, corresponding to ≥20 LD50 for the wild-type strain. In both experiments, animals were monitored for 21 days. At the end of the first set of experiments, all 30 mice exposed to mutant strains survived 21 days post-exposure (pink, orange, and blue lines), whereas seven mice exposed to the wild-type strain did not survive (green line). At the end of the second set of experiments, all 30 mice exposed to mutant strains also survived 21 days post-exposure (pink, orange, and blue lines), whereas all 10 mice infected with B. mallei ATCC 23344 died (purple line). There was a statistically significant difference in the survival rate of mice exposed to mutant strains and mice exposed to the wild-type strain in both sets of experiments (p = 4 × 10−3 and p = 9 × 10−5 for the first and second set of experiments, respectively). These results support the notion that each of the three mutants attenuates virulence when infected in mice via the inhalational route of infection.
Fig. 4.Host-pathogen interactions for three Three B. mallei virulence factors (green nodes) interact with 192 human (A) and 236 murine (B) proteins (purple and red nodes). There are 12 conserved protein-protein interactions (PPIs) between these two PPI data sets (red edges), i.e. in 12 PPIs, human proteins (red nodes in A) interacted with the same B. mallei proteins as their murine orthologs (red nodes in B). The host proteins (human/murine) in the conserved interactions include: activating signal cointegrator 1 complex subunit 3 (ASCC3/Ascc3), epididymal secretory protein E1 (NPC2/Npc2), sperm-associated antigen 17 (SPAG17/Spag17), ARCN1 protein-coatomer subunit-δ (ARCN1/Arcn1), UMP-cytidine monophosphate kinase (CMPK1/Cmpk1), heat shock 70-kDa protein 5 (HSPA5/Hspa5), bisphosphoglycerate mutase (BPGM/Bpgm), DnaJ homolog subfamily B, member 4 (DNAJB4/Dnajb4), syntaxin-8 (STX8/Stx8), and thioredoxin-like protein 1 (TXNL1/Txnl1).