| Literature DB >> 27271669 |
Nora J Foegeding1, Rhonda R Caston2, Mark S McClain3, Melanie D Ohi4,5, Timothy L Cover6,7,8.
Abstract
The VacA toxin secreted by Helicobacter pylori enhances the ability of the bacteria to colonize the stomach and contributes to the pathogenesis of gastric adenocarcinoma and peptic ulcer disease. The amino acid sequence and structure of VacA are unrelated to corresponding features of other known bacterial toxins. VacA is classified as a pore-forming toxin, and many of its effects on host cells are attributed to formation of channels in intracellular sites. The most extensively studied VacA activity is its capacity to stimulate vacuole formation, but the toxin has many additional effects on host cells. Multiple cell types are susceptible to VacA, including gastric epithelial cells, parietal cells, T cells, and other types of immune cells. This review focuses on the wide range of VacA actions that are detectable in vitro, as well as actions of VacA in vivo that are relevant for H. pylori colonization of the stomach and development of gastric disease.Entities:
Keywords: autotransporter; bacterial toxins; gastric cancer; type V secretion; vacuolating toxin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27271669 PMCID: PMC4926140 DOI: 10.3390/toxins8060173
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Figure 1Relatedness of H. pylori VacA to H. cetorum VacA proteins and H. pylori VacA-like proteins. The amino acid sequence of VacA (WP_000405515) from a representative H. pylori strain (J99) was aligned to the sequences of related proteins using Needleman–Wunsch global alignment. The amino acid numbers of each protein are shown on the x and y axes, and results of the pairwise alignments are represented as dot matrices. Protein sequences also were searched against the Conserved Domain Database, and domains shared between VacA and the query protein sequence are shown above the dot matrices. Query proteins were H. cetorum HCD_01900 (WP_014658932) (A); H. cetorum HCW_04035 (WP_014660950) (B); H. pylori ImaA (WP_000808594) (C); H. pylori FaaA (WP_000222280) (D); and H. pylori VlpC (WP_000874591) (E). The sequences of the latter three H. pylori VacA-like proteins are from H. pylori strain J99. “VacA superfamily” corresponds to the VacA passenger domain, and “autotransporter β-barrel” corresponds to a domain predicted to be localized to the outer membrane. The autotransporter β-barrel is conserved in all of the proteins analyzed, but there is very little sequence relatedness when comparing the passenger domain of H. pylori VacA with corresponding regions of H. pylori VacA-like proteins.
Figure 2VacA organization and genetic diversity. (A) The organization of the 140 kDa VacA protein is shown, including the amino-terminal signal peptide, the secreted 88 kDa VacA toxin, a 12 kDa peptide of unknown function, and a carboxy-terminal domain with a predicted β-barrel structure (autotransporter β-barrel); (B) The 88 kDa secreted VacA toxin can undergo proteolytic cleavage into two domains, p33 and p55 (colored blue and red). Three regions of sequence diversity (s-, i-, and m-regions) are shown; (C) Representative signal peptides from type s1 and s2 VacA proteins are shown. Arrowheads mark the sites of signal peptide cleavage. Secreted type s2 VacA proteins contain an amino-terminal extension relative to the secreted type s1 VacA proteins; (D) Representative i-region sequences are shown.
Figure 3Structural organization of water-soluble VacA oligomers. A hexamer (left) and dodecamer (right) are shown. Within each component p88 monomer, p33 and p55 domains are shown in blue and red, respectively. A crystal structure has been solved for a portion of p55 [43], corresponding to peripheral elements of the oligomer [54]. Water-soluble hexamers are predicted to be structurally similar to membrane channels formed by VacA.