| Literature DB >> 30510173 |
Dingka Song1, Junchen Meng1, Jie Cheng2, Zheng Fan3, Pengyu Chen4, Hefei Ruan1, Zhongyuan Tu5, Ning Kang1, Nan Li6, Ying Xu1, Xiaobo Wang1, Fei Shu1, Libing Mu1, Tengfei Li1, Wenran Ren1, Xin Lin1, Jun Zhu7,8, Xiaohong Fang6, Matthias W Amrein9, Weihui Wu3, Li-Tang Yan4, Junhong Lü2, Tie Xia1, Yan Shi10,11.
Abstract
Bacterial quorum-sensing autoinducers are small chemicals released to control microbial community behaviours. N-(3-oxo-dodecanoyl) homoserine lactone, the autoinducer of the Pseudomonas aeruginosa LasI-LasR circuitry, triggers significant cell death in lymphocytes. We found that this molecule is incorporated into the mammalian plasma membrane and induces dissolution of eukaryotic lipid domains. This event expels tumour necrosis factor receptor 1 into the disordered lipid phase for its spontaneous trimerization without its ligand and drives caspase 3-caspase 8-mediated apoptosis. In vivo, P. aeruginosa releases N-(3-oxo-dodecanoyl) homoserine lactone to suppress host immunity for its own better survival; conversely, blockage of caspases strongly reduces the severity of the infection. This work reveals an unknown communication method between microorganisms and the mammalian host and suggests interventions of bacterial infections by intercepting quorum-sensing signalling.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30510173 DOI: 10.1038/s41564-018-0290-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Microbiol ISSN: 2058-5276 Impact factor: 17.745