| Literature DB >> 30533418 |
Antje Flieger1, Freddy Frischknecht2, Georg Häcker3, Mathias W Hornef4, Gabriele Pradel5.
Abstract
Host cell exit is a critical step in the life-cycle of intracellular pathogens, intimately linked to barrier penetration, tissue dissemination, inflammation, and pathogen transmission. Like cell invasion and intracellular survival, host cell exit represents a well-regulated program that has evolved during host-pathogen co-evolution and that relies on the dynamic and intricate interplay between multiple host and microbial factors. Three distinct pathways of host cell exit have been identified that are employed by three different taxa of intracellular pathogens, bacteria, fungi and protozoa, namely (i) the initiation of programmed cell death, (ii) the active breaching of host cellderived membranes, and (iii) the induced membrane-dependent exit without host cell lysis. Strikingly, an increasing number of studies show that the majority of intracellular pathogens utilize more than one of these strategies, dependent on life-cycle stage, environmental factors and/or host cell type. This review summarizes the diverse exit strategies of intracellular-living bacterial, fungal and protozoan pathogens and discusses the convergently evolved commonalities as well as system-specific variations thereof. Key microbial molecules involved in host cell exit are highlighted and discussed as potential targets for future interventional approaches.Entities:
Keywords: compartment; egress; exit; host cell; membrane lysis.; pathogen; programmed cell death; vacuolar escape
Year: 2018 PMID: 30533418 PMCID: PMC6282021 DOI: 10.15698/mic2018.12.659
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Cell ISSN: 2311-2638
Figure 1FIGURE 1: The three strategies of host cell exit.
(1) Induction of programmed cell death, including the non-lytic apoptosis and the lytic necroptosis and pyroptosis pathways; (2) Active host cell destruction, comprising breaching of host cell membranes such as the vacuolar and/or the host cell plasma membrane; (3) Induced membrane-dependent exit without host cell destruction, e.g. by actin tail (yellow line)- mediated protrusions, extrusions, budding, exocytosis, expulsion or ejection via an ejectosome (yellow box). Pathogens for which distinct pathways were demonstrated are indicated. AB, apoptotic body; FC, fragmented chromatin; N, nucleus; P, pathogen; V, vacuole.
Microbial key factors of host cell exit.
| CPAF | Lytic vacuolar escape | Processes host cell proteins, e.g. vimentin and LAP-1 | ||
| SUB1 | Host cell lysis | Processes effectors, e.g. SERA5, SERA6, MSP1 | ||
| SERA5 | Host cell lysis | Protease-like w/o activity, unknown regulatory function | ||
| SERA6 | Host cell lysis | Spectrin cleavage, suggested to mediate destabilization of RBC cytoskeleton | ||
| SERA5 | Cyst destruction | Involved in sporozoite egress from the oocyst, unknown function | ||
| PM VIII | Cyst destruction | Involved in sporozoite egress from the oocyst, unknown function | ||
| PMX | Host cell lysis | Processing of effectors, e.g. SUB1 | ||
| PI-PLC PlcA | Lytic vacuolar escape | Suggested to stalling autophagosome formation during vacuolar escape | ||
| PC-PLC PlcB | Lytic vacuolar escape | Suggested to stalling autophagosome formation during vacuolar escape | ||
| PlaA | Lytic vacuolar escape | Involved in vacuolar membrane rupture, counteracted by SdhA | ||
| SseJ | Lytic vacuolar escape | Involved in SCV membrane rupture, counteracted by SifA | ||
| PbPL | Lytic vacuolar escape | Involved in PVM rupture | ||
| LCAT | Host cell lysis | Involved in PVM rupture, unknown function | ||
| LLO | Lytic vacuolar escape | Lyses membranes of primary and secondary vacuoles | ||
| ESAT-6 | Lytic vacuolar escape | Lyses vacuolar membrane | ||
| CFP-10 | Lytic vacuolar escape | Lyses vacuolar membrane | ||
| T3SS1 | Lytic vacuolar escape | Involved in vacuolar escape, unknown function | ||
| IpaB | Lytic vacuolar escape | Formation of pore complex in vacuolar membrane, cholesterol binding | ||
| IpaC | Lytic vacuolar escape | Formation of pore complex in vacuolar membrane, cholesterol binding | ||
| IpaD | Lytic vacuolar escape | Suggested to regulator formation of pore complex in vacuolar membrane | ||
| Leishporin | Lytic vacuolar escape | Involved in phagolysosomale escape, unknown function | ||
| PPLP1 | Lytic vacuolar escape | Perforation of transient vacuolar membrane | ||
| PPLP2 | Host cell lysis | Perforation of the RBCM | ||
| Tc-Tox | Lytic vacuolar escape | Involved in vacuolar escape, unknown function | ||
| Sec14, Plb1 | Vomocytosis | Non-lytic escape from macrophages and amoebae | ||
| LepA | Endocytosis | Non-lytic escape from amoebae | ||
| LepB | Endocytosis | Non-lytic escape from amoebae | ||
| ESAT-6 | Ejection | Non-lytic escape from amoebae | ||
| ESX-1 | Ejection | Non-lytic escape from amoebae | ||
| BimA | Protrusion | Involved in actin tail formation, mimicry of Ena/VASP actin polymerases | ||
| ActA | Protrusion | Involved in actin tail formation, WASP mimicry | ||
| InlC | Protrusion | Involved in actin tail formation, cortex destabilization | ||
| RickA | Protrusion | Involved in actin tail formation, WASP mimicry | ||
| Sca2 | Protrusion | Involved in actin tail formation, actin nucleator | ||
| Sca4 | Protrusion | Involved in protrusion engulfment, interaction with vinculin | ||
| IcsA | Protrusion | Involved in actin tail formation, N-WASP activation | ||
| VirA | Protrusion | Involved in actin tail formation, microtubule degradation, cysteine protease-like | ||
| MTRAP | Host cell lysis | Involved in PVM rupture, suggested to mediate contact between PVM and parasite cytoskeleton | ||
| GEST | Host cell lysis | Involved in PVM rupture, unknown function | ||
| PAT | Host cell lysis | Involved in osmiophilic body discharge | ||
| Transsialidase | Lytic vacuolar escape | Involved in vacuolar escape, unknown function |
Figure 2FIGURE 2: Active host cell lysis by Apicomplexan parasites.
The key molecules and the sequence of action during host cell egress by merozoites and gametocytes of Plasmodium and by tachyzoites of Toxoplasma gondii, respectively, are indicated. Question marks indicate steps with ambiguous or unknown interactions. DG, dense granule; EV, egress vesicle; EX, exoneme; HCM, host cell membrane; MN, microneme; N, nucleus; OB, osmiophilic body; PVM, parasitophorous vacuole membrane; RBCM, red blood cell membrane.