| Literature DB >> 27713866 |
Punsiri M Colonne1, Caylin G Winchell1, Daniel E Voth1.
Abstract
Intracellular bacterial pathogens replicate within eukaryotic cells and display unique adaptations that support key infection events including invasion, replication, immune evasion, and dissemination. From invasion to dissemination, all stages of the intracellular bacterial life cycle share the same three-dimensional cytosolic space containing the host cytoskeleton. For successful infection and replication, many pathogens hijack the cytoskeleton using effector proteins introduced into the host cytosol by specialized secretion systems. A subset of effectors contains eukaryotic-like motifs that mimic host proteins to exploit signaling and modify specific cytoskeletal components such as actin and microtubules. Cytoskeletal rearrangement promotes numerous events that are beneficial to the pathogen, including internalization of bacteria, structural support for bacteria-containing vacuoles, altered vesicular trafficking, actin-dependent bacterial movement, and pathogen dissemination. This review highlights a diverse group of obligate intracellular bacterial pathogens that manipulate the host cytoskeleton to thrive within eukaryotic cells and discusses underlying molecular mechanisms that promote these dynamic host-pathogen interactions.Entities:
Keywords: actin; bacteria; cytoskeleton; intracellular; pathogen
Mesh:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27713866 PMCID: PMC5031698 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2016.00107
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Figure 1Intracellular bacteria use host actin for diverse infection events. Intracellular bacteria actively manipulate the host actin cytoskeleton to facilitate major lifecycle events, such as cellular invasion, intracellular replication, and dissemination. Arrows indicate activation of specific host cell components. (A) Host cell entry: In non-phagocytic cells, bacteria use a zipper (Rickettsia) or trigger (Chlamydia) mechanism to facilitate infection. Phagocytic cells engulf bacterial pathogens (C. burnetii and E. chaffeensis) by phagocytosis. To promote uptake, bacteria actively remodel actin at the attachment site by activating host kinase signaling cascades. (B) Intracellular life: Some cytosolic bacteria (SFG Rickettsia) form actin tails to facilitate mobility within the cell. Pathogens that reside within membrane-bound vacuoles (Chlamydia, C. burnetii, and E. chaffeensis) manipulate the cytoskeleton to facilitate vacuole formation and stability. (C) Host cell escape: One group of bacteria (SFG Rickettsia) use actin-based motility to exit infected cells and move into non-infected bystander cells. Some host membrane-bound pathogen-containing vacuoles are pinched off by extrusion (Chlamydia), a process that requires actin remodeling. Other intracellular bacteria actively remodel actin at the host cell surface to form membrane protrusions (E. chaffeensis), connecting infected and uninfected neighboring cells. Bacteria are then transported through protrusions into neighboring cells to start a new infection cycle. T3SS, type III secretion system; T4SS, type IV secretion system; FcR, Fc Receptor; CR, Complement Receptor.