| Literature DB >> 24833223 |
Johanna Haiko1, Benita Westerlund-Wikström2.
Abstract
The bacterial flagellum is a complex apparatus assembled of more than 20 different proteins. The flagellar basal body traverses the cell wall, whereas the curved hook connects the basal body to the whip-like flagellar filament that protrudes several µm from the bacterial cell. The flagellum has traditionally been regarded only as a motility organelle, but more recently it has become evident that flagella have a number of other biological functions. The major subunit, flagellin or FliC, of the flagellum plays a well-documented role in innate immunity and as a dominant antigen of the adaptive immune response. Importantly, flagella have also been reported to function as adhesins. Whole flagella have been indicated as significant in bacterial adhesion to and invasion into host cells. In various pathogens, e.g., Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Clostridium difficile, flagellin and/or the distally located flagellar cap protein have been reported to function as adhesins. Recently, FliC of Shiga-toxigenic E. coli was shown to be involved in cellular invasion via lipid rafts. Here, we examine the latest or most important findings regarding flagellar adhesive and invasive properties, especially focusing on the flagellum as a potential virulence factor.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24833223 PMCID: PMC4009794 DOI: 10.3390/biology2041242
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biology (Basel) ISSN: 2079-7737
Figure 1(A) Schematic presentation of bacterial flagellum structure. The pentameric FliD cap at the distal end of the filament, the hollow filament composed of about 20,000 identical flagellin subunits, the junction zone between filament and hook, and the hook connecting the filament to the basal body, represent extracellular parts (green shades) of the flagellum. The basal body (grey) in the cell wall consists of a centrally located hollow rod that connects different rings embedded in the outer membrane (OM), the peptidoglycan layer, and the cytoplasmic membrane (CM). Stator complexes (dark grey), composed of membrane proteins MotA and MotB, are associated with the CM-bound ring and the cytoplasmic ring below the CM, and provide motility-required energy. The cytoplasmic export machinery (black) that secretes the extracellular subunits is located within the cytoplasmic ring. Note that OM-associated parts of the basal body are absent in the flagella of Gram-positive bacteria. (B) Schematic presentation of flagellin monomer (upper panel) and flagellin polymerization (lower panel). The variable, exposed, globular domains of flagellin are shown in green. The conserved N- and C-terminal regions involved in flagellum polymerization are indicated (blue, light blue, yellow, red) as well as the regions binding to TLR5 (light blue, yellow) and those involved in inflammasome formation (blue, red).
Overview of flagella proteins relevant for the review (a).
| Role in/Part of flagellum | Protein name/Number of proteins | Function |
|---|---|---|
| Regulation of flagellar biosynthesis | FlhC, FlhD, FlbA | Regulators |
| FliI | Export-related ATPase | |
| FliA | Flagellar sigma factor | |
| Motility/chemotaxis | CheA | Smooth swimming |
| CheB | Tumbling | |
| CheW, CheV | Chemotaxis | |
| MotA, MotB | Rotation of flagellum | |
| Export machinery | 9 different proteins | Protein export |
| FlhE | Chaperone or plug | |
| Basal body | 20 different proteins | Cell-wall anchor, rotor, holds export apparatus |
| FlgJ | Muramidase | |
| Hook | FlgE | Hook |
| Hook-filament junction | FlgK, FlgL | Connect filament to hook |
| Filament | FliC (alternative names FljB, FlaA, FlaB) | Main structural subunit |
| FliD | Filament cap |
(a) Information combined from [2,4,5,6,7]. The designations used are mainly the names in enteric bacteria; for homologs in other species, see [8].
Direct and indirect roles of flagella in bacterial adhesion.
| Role of flagella/Bacterial species | Flagellum/Protein/Gene | Effect/Role in virulence | Target/Administration route | Receptor | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Flagellum | Adhesion | HeLa cells | ND | [ | |
| Flagellum | Adhesion; invasion | ND | [ | ||
| Flagellum | Adhesion | Intestine-407 | ND | [ | |
| FliC, FliD; flagellum | Binding; no effect | Mouse cecal mucus, hamster | ND | [ | |
| Flagellum, FliC | Adhesion; Microcolony formation | HeLa cells | ND | [ | |
| Flagellum, FliC | Binding | Mucins (a), bovine intestinal mucus, laminin, collagen | ND | [ | |
| Flagellum | Adhesion; invasion | Polarized Caco-2BBe, T-84; BREC; Caco-2; T-84; IPEC-J2; IPEC-1 | ND | [ | |
| Flagellum | Association | HBMEC | ND | [ | |
| Flagellum, FliC | Adhesion | Caco-2, mice intestine | EtpA | [ | |
| FliC | Adhesion | Human intestinal cryosections, LS174T | gluconate | [ | |
| FliC | Adhesion; virulence | 1HAEo; mice | GM1, GD1a, asialo-GM1 | [ | |
| FliC; FliD | Adhesion | mucin, MUC1 | ND | [ | |
| FliD | Adhesion | human respiratory mucin | Lewis x glycotype | [ | |
| Flagellum | Adhesion | Calu-3 basolateral surface | HSPGs (b) | [ | |
| Flagellum | Adhesion; virulence | Intestine-407; orally in mice | ND | [ | |
| Flagellum | Adhesion | Intestine-407 | ND | [ | |
| Flagellin | Adhesion | Mouse tracheal mucus | ND | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Flagellum | Adhesion; biofilm formation | Caco-2 | ND | [ | |
| Flagellum | Mucus penetration; persistence; invasion | Hep-2, HT2916E, HT2919A; orally in chicks; HCT-8 | asialo-GM1, lipid rafts | [ | |
| FliC | Virulence | Orally in Sm-treated mice | ND | [ | |
| Flagellum | Colonization | Gastric epithelium, orally in mice | ND | [ | |
| Flagellum | Invasion; colonization | Human renal proximal tubular epithelial cells, EJ/28 | ND | [ | |
| Flagellum | Increased invasion | Intestine-407 | ND | [ | |
| Flagellum | Increased invasion | Caco-2, Hep-2, Div-1 | ND | [ | |
| Flagellum | Increased adhesion; invasion | Intestine-407 | ND | [ | |
|
| |||||
|
| Adhesion, invasion | Intestine-407 | ND | [ | |
|
| Colonization | Orally in cattle | ND | [ | |
| FliA | Adhesion, invasion | Intestine-407 | ND | [ | |
|
| Adhesion | Kato III, primary human gastric epithelial cells | ND | [ |
(a) bovine submaxillary gland type I, porcine stomach type II; (b) heparan sulfate proteoglycans; ND, not determined.
Cell lines mentioned in the review (a).
| Abbreviation | Cell line | Origin |
|---|---|---|
| 1HAEo | airway epithelial cells | human |
| A549 | lung epithelial cells | human |
| BREC | primary rectal epithelial cells | bovine |
| Caco-2 | colorectal adenocarcinoma epithelial cells | human |
| Caco-2BBe | colorectal adenocarcinoma epithelial cells expressing enterocyte-like brush border | human |
| Calu-3 | lung adenocarcinoma epithelial cells | human |
| CHO Lec-2 | relatively ganglioside deficient CHO derivative | Chinese hamster |
| CHO-Muc1 | mucin 1-expressing ovary cells | Chinese hamster |
| Div-1 | gastrointestinal mucosal cells | avian |
| EJ/28 | urothelial cells | human |
| 16HBE | polarized airway epithelial cells | human |
| HBMEC | brain microvascular endothelial cells | human |
| HCT-8 | ileocecal colorectal adenocarcinoma cells | human |
| HeLa | cervical tumor cells | human |
| Hep-2 | epidermoid cancer cell line contaminated by HeLa cells | human |
| HT29 | colorectal adenocarcinoma epithelial cells | human |
| HT2916E | mucus-secreting subclone of HT29 | human |
| HT2919A | non-mucus-secreting subclone of HT29 | human |
| Int(estine)-407 | intestinal embryonic jejunum and ileum epithelial cells contaminated by HeLa cells | human |
| IPEC-1 | neonatal ileal and jejunal epithelial cells | piglet |
| IPEC-J2 | neonatal jejunal columnar epithelial cells | piglet |
| Kato III | gastric adenocarcinoma cells | human |
| LS174T | mucin-secreting colorectal adenocarcinoma epithelial cells | human |
| RAW264.7 | macrophage cells | murine |
| T24 | bladder epithelial cells | human |
| T-84 | colorectal adenocarcinoma cells | human |
(a) Information collected from relevant original and review articles, and culture collections.
E. coli pathovars relevant for the review.
| Pathovar | Abbreviation | Disease/symptoms | Major site of colonization | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Enterohaemorrhagic
| EHEC | Gastroenteritis; hemorrhagic colitis; HUS (a) | Large bowel | [ |
| Enteropathogenic
| EPEC | Infant diarrhea in developing countries | Small bowel | [ |
| Atypical enteropathogenic
| aEPEC | Persistent diarrhea in children | Small bowel | [ |
| Enterotoxigenic
| ETEC | Infant diarrhea; travelers’ diarrhea | Small bowel | [ |
| Enteroinvasive
| EIEC | Dysentery | Large bowel | [ |
| Enteroaggregative
| EAEC | Variable (from non-symptomatic to HUS) | Large bowel, small bowel | [ |
| Diffusely adherent
| DAEC | Diarrhea in young children; nosocomial adult diarrhea | Small bowel | [ |
| Shiga-toxin producing
| STEC | Dependent on Shiga-toxin expressing pathovar | Dependent on pathovar | [ |
|
| ||||
| Newborn-meningitis causing
| NMEC | Newborn meningitis; septicaemia | Brain, blood | [ |
| Uropathogenic
| UPEC | Urinary tract infections; septicaemia | Bladder, kidney, blood | [ |
|
| ||||
| Adherent-invasive
| AIEC | Crohn’s disease | Ileum of small bowel | [ |
| Avian pathogenic
| APEC | Avian colibacillosis | Systemic infection | [ |
| Porcine pathogenic
| Porcine STEC | Post-weaning diarrhea; edema disease | Intestine;vasculature | [ |
(a) hemolytic-uremic syndrome.
Figure 2Summary of the bacterial flagellum as an adhesin. Flagellum can mediate bacterial adhesion to eukaryotic cells indirectly via motility (1), or by binding directly to epithelial cells either on apical (2) or basolateral surface (3). Flagellar target receptors include mucus and mucins (4), different glycans on cells or in mucus (gluconate, heparan sulfate proteoglycans, Lewis x glycotype, GM1, asialo-GM1, GD1a) (5), extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins (6), or bacterial-secreted EtpA, which in turn adheres to host cells (7). Toll-like receptor 5 (TLR5) is expressed mostly at the basolateral cell surface and binds FliC, inducing the host’s immune defense (8). FliC binding also induces TLR5 expression at the apical surface. In addition to various epithelia, flagella may also adhere to amoebae (9) or connect two bacterial species (10).