| Literature DB >> 32265873 |
Julie C Caruana1, Scott A Walper2.
Abstract
Bacterial membrane vesicles are proteoliposomal nanoparticles produced by both Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria. As they originate from the outer surface of the bacteria, their composition and content is generally similar to the parent bacterium's membrane and cytoplasm. However, there is ample evidence that preferential packaging of proteins, metabolites, and toxins into vesicles does occur. Incorporation into vesicles imparts a number of benefits to the cargo, including protection from degradation by other bacteria, the host organism, or environmental factors, maintenance of a favorable microenvironment for enzymatic activity, and increased potential for long-distance movement. This enables vesicles to serve specialized functions tailored to changing or challenging environments, particularly in regard to microbial community interactions including quorum sensing, biofilm formation, antibiotic resistance, antimicrobial peptide expression and deployment, and nutrient acquisition. Additionally, based on their contents, vesicles play crucial roles in host-microbe interactions as carriers of virulence factors and other modulators of host cell function. Here, we discuss recent advances in our understanding of how vesicles function as signals both within microbial communities and between pathogenic or commensal microbes and their mammalian hosts. We also highlight a few areas that are currently ripe for additional research, including the mechanisms of selective cargo packaging into membrane vesicles and of cargo processing once it enters mammalian host cells, the function of vesicles in transfer of nucleic acids among bacteria, and the possibility of engineering commensal bacteria to deliver cargo of interest to mammalian hosts in a controlled manner.Entities:
Keywords: antimicrobial; cell delivery; community interactions; host-microbe interactions; host-pathogen interactions; membrane vesicles; outer membrane vesicles
Year: 2020 PMID: 32265873 PMCID: PMC7105600 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.00432
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
FIGURE 1Formation of Gram-negative OMVs. Nascent OMVs form as a constriction of the outermost membrane leading to a blebbing structure that contain both membrane and periplasmic proteins that are encapsulated as cargo. Reproduced with permission from Jan (2017).
Membrane vesicle functions in microbe-microbe and microbe-host interactions.
| Function | Species | Cargo (if known) | References |
| OMV biogenesis | Pseudomonas quinolone signal (PQS) | ||
| Decoys for titration of harmful substances including antimicrobial peptides, membrane-active antibiotics, phage, chlorhexidine | Unknown factors, LPS (binds chlorhexidine) | ||
| Quorum sensing | Pseudomonas quinolone signal (PQS), C16-HSL, CAI-1 | ||
| Biofilm formation | DNA, other unknown cargo | ||
| Iron acquisition | Pseudomonas quinolone signal (PQS), mycobactin (siderophore) | ||
| Polysaccharide metabolism in the human intestine | Polysaccharide utilization loci (PUL) gene products | ||
| Cellulose degradation (by horizontal gene transfer) | DNA for cellulolytic genes | ||
| Antibiotic resistance (enzyme-based) | β-lactamases, membrane bound proteases | ||
| Antibiotic and antimicrobial peptide resistance (via horizontal gene transfer) | DNA for β-lactamase genes | ||
| Protection from oxidative damage | KatA (catalase) | ||
| Horizontal gene transfer of virulence genes | DNA for genes encoding intimin and shiga toxin | ||
| Lysis of other microbes (for defense or predation) | Proteases, hydrolases, secondary metabolites with antimicrobial activity, bacteriocins | ||
| Delivery of toxins and virulence factors to host cells | Shiga toxin, hemolysin, cytolethal distending toxin, cholera toxin, alkaline phosphatase, hemolytic phospholipase C, CFTR inhibitory factor, gingipains, dentilisin, vacuolating cytotoxin autotransporter | ||
| Delivery of nucleic acids to host cells | DNA and RNA | ||
| Suppression of inflammation related to colitis and allergic responses | Polysaccharide A (PSA), unknown factors | ||
| Strengthening of intestinal tight junctions and reduced intestinal permeability | Unknown | ||
| Reduced development of obesity and related symptoms in mice fed a high-fat diet | Unknown | ||
| Reduction in depressive behavior | Unknown | ||
| Prevention or treatment of cancer (cytotoxic effects on hepatic cancer cells) | Unknown | ||
| Protection from pathogen infection (stimulation of host defense genes) | Unknown | ||
FIGURE 2Outer membrane vesicles in H. pylori biofilms. TEM micrograph shows the formation and release of OMVs (arrows) of H. pylori during the formation of a biofilm in a rich bacterial media. Reproduced with permission (Yonezawa et al., 2009).
FIGURE 3Proposed model for OMV-mediated iron acquisition. Here it is proposed that a soluble protein, TseF, is exported and accumulates on the surface of OMVs containing the QS molecule PQS-Fe3+. The TseF protein interacts with cell-surface receptors to facilitate iron uptake into the cell, panel A. AS shown in panel B, mutants lacking the gene (blue) show a severe growth inhibition which can be recovered through supplementation with OMVs containing TseF protein (red). Reproduced with permission from Lin et al. (2017).
FIGURE 4Outer membrane vesicle-mediated protection from environmental stresses. H. pylori and other bacterial species often load enzymes capable of degrading reactive oxygen species such as hydrogen peroxide and other environmental compounds. Lekmeechai et al. (2018) showed that OMVs of wild-type H. pylori (which contain the catalase KatA) could protect H. pylori mutants lacking KatA from the bactericidal effects of H2O2, while OMVs from katA mutants or heat-inactivated OMVs could not. Data is shown as mean ± SD count of colony forming units (CFU); n = 3, *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01. Reproduced with permission from Lekmeechai et al. (2018).
FIGURE 5Mechanisms of OMV entry into host cells. OMVs can enter by clathrin-mediated endocytosis, lipid-raft-mediated endocytosis that may or may not be dependent on caveolin, or by macropinocytosis or phagocytosis which are more general pathways for uptake of material from the environment. Reproduced with permission from Anand and Chaudhuri (2016).
FIGURE 6Model for fusion of P. aeruginosa OMVs with airway epithelial cells. Virulence factors and Cif are packaged into OMVs released by P. aeruginosa. These OMVs fuse with host cells at lipid raft microdomains in the plasma membrane. Reproduced with permission from Bomberger et al. (2009).
FIGURE 7A FRET-based assay to monitor OMV entry. Target mammalian cells are loaded with a FRET-based reporter (indicated by the green color) that can be cleaved by an enzyme loaded within the OMV (Bla). Enzyme is released into the cytoplasm as OMVs fuse to the membrane of target cells, cleaving a ligand within the FRET reporter and leading to a shift in the emission wavelength (indicated by the blue color). Reproduced with permission from O’Donoghue et al. (2017).
FIGURE 8Lipopolysaccharide composition determines the mechanism of entry for OMVs into host cells. E. coli OMVs with LPS lacking the O-antigen enter via clathrin-coated pits, and uptake can be blocked experimentally with the use of dynasore or papain. OMVs with LPS containing the O-antigen enter via lipid rafts, a more efficient pathway, as evidenced by blocking of this uptake by filipin and methyl–β cyclodextrin. Reproduced with permission from O’Donoghue et al. (2017).
FIGURE 9Potential roles for bacterial MVs. Membrane vesicles isolated directly from bacterial culture have seen some success as vaccine candidates. Engineered MVs have also been used for successful expression and/or delivery of biomolecules such as proteins and nucleic acids, indicating potential in areas such as vaccine development and industrial catalysis.
FIGURE 10Intracellular trafficking of bacterial toxins delivered via OMVs. In this example toxins contained in OMVs of E. coli O157 are endocytosed into an endosome (1) where the cargo toxins separate into individual subunits (2) which escape the endosome and migrate to the Golgi (3) and endoplasmic reticulum (4). These compounds eventually make their way to their cellular targets of DNA (5) or the ribosome (6). Additional cytotoxic components within the OMV enter the late endosome (7) and eventually escape to interact with the mitochondria (8,9) while remaining OMV-associated components are degraded in the lysosome (10). Reproduced with permission from Bielaszewska et al. (2017).
FIGURE 11Modification of OMVs. A number of strategies have been employed to functionalize bacterial MVs both at the surface and within the lumen. MVs can be passively loaded through periplasmic localization of recombinant proteins (green) or through other anchoring mechanisms that can position recombinant proteins both internally or externally (blue). Peptides and proteins have been anchored to the surface for targeting and purification (pink sphere) while protein scaffolds have been used to assemble enzyme cascades.