| Literature DB >> 27889464 |
Kwang-Zin Lee1, Matthieu Lestradet2, Catherine Socha2, Stefanie Schirmeier2, Antonin Schmitz3, Caroline Spenlé4, Olivier Lefebvre4, Céline Keime5, Wennida M Yamba2, Richard Bou Aoun2, Samuel Liegeois2, Yannick Schwab5, Patricia Simon-Assmann4, Frédéric Dalle6, Dominique Ferrandon7.
Abstract
Besides digesting nutrients, the gut protects the host against invasion by pathogens. Enterocytes may be subjected to damage by both microbial and host defensive responses, causing their death. Here, we report a rapid epithelial response that alleviates infection stress and protects the enterocytes from the action of microbial virulence factors. Intestinal epithelia exposed to hemolysin, a pore-forming toxin secreted by Serratia marcescens, undergo an evolutionarily conserved process of thinning followed by the recovery of their initial thickness within a few hours. In response to hemolysin attack, Drosophila melanogaster enterocytes extrude most of their apical cytoplasm, including damaged organelles such as mitochondria, yet do not lyse. We identify two secreted peptides, the expression of which requires CyclinJ, that mediate the recovery phase in which enterocytes regain their original shape and volume. Epithelial thinning and recovery constitute a fast and efficient response to intestinal infections, with pore-forming toxins acting as alarm signals.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27889464 DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2016.10.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Host Microbe ISSN: 1931-3128 Impact factor: 21.023