| Literature DB >> 32205404 |
Miku Kuba1, Nitika Neha2,3, Patrice Newton1, Yi Wei Lee1, Vicki Bennett-Wood1, Abderrahman Hachani1, David P De Souza2, Brunda Nijagal2, Saravanan Dayalan2, Dedreia Tull2, Malcolm J McConville2,4, Fiona M Sansom3, Hayley J Newton5.
Abstract
The zoonotic bacterial pathogen Coxiella burnetii is the causative agent of Q fever, a febrile illness which can cause a serious chronic infection. C. burnetii is a unique intracellular bacterium which replicates within host lysosome-derived vacuoles. The ability of C. burnetii to replicate within this normally hostile compartment is dependent on the activity of the Dot/Icm type 4B secretion system. In a previous study, a transposon mutagenesis screen suggested that the disruption of the gene encoding the novel protein CBU2072 rendered C. burnetii incapable of intracellular replication. This protein, subsequently named EirA (essential for intracellular replication A), is indispensable for intracellular replication and virulence, as demonstrated by infection of human cell lines and in vivo infection of Galleria mellonella The putative N-terminal signal peptide is essential for protein function but is not required for localization of EirA to the bacterial inner membrane compartment and axenic culture supernatant. In the absence of EirA, C. burnetii remains viable but nonreplicative within the host phagolysosome, as coinfection with C. burnetii expressing native EirA rescues the replicative defect in the mutant strain. In addition, while the bacterial ultrastructure appears to be intact, there is an altered metabolic profile shift in the absence of EirA, suggesting that EirA may impact overall metabolism. Most strikingly, in the absence of EirA, Dot/Icm effector translocation was inhibited even when EirA-deficient C. burnetii replicated in the wild type (WT)-supported Coxiella containing vacuoles. EirA may therefore have a novel role in the control of Dot/Icm activity and represent an important new therapeutic target.Entities:
Keywords: Coxiella burnetiizzm321990; bacterial pathogenesis; host-pathogen interactions; type IV secretion system; virulence factor; virulence factors
Year: 2020 PMID: 32205404 PMCID: PMC7240097 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.00913-19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Immun ISSN: 0019-9567 Impact factor: 3.441