| Literature DB >> 32961832 |
Margaux De Meyer1,2, Joren De Ryck1,3,4, Sofie Goormachtig3,4, Petra Van Damme1.
Abstract
Manipulation of host cellular processes by translocated bacterial effectors is key to the success of bacterial pathogens and some symbionts. Therefore, a comprehensive understanding of effectors is of critical importance to understand infection biology. It has become increasingly clear that the identification of host protein targets contributes invaluable knowledge to the characterization of effector function during pathogenesis. Recent advances in mapping protein-protein interaction networks by means of mass spectrometry-based interactomics have enabled the identification of host targets at large-scale. In this review, we highlight mass spectrometry-driven proteomics strategies and recent advances to elucidate type-III secretion system effector-host protein-protein interactions. Furthermore, we highlight approaches for defining spatial and temporal effector-host interactions, and discuss possible avenues for studying natively delivered effectors in the context of infection. Overall, the knowledge gained when unravelling effector complexation with host factors will provide novel opportunities to control infectious disease outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: AP-MS; BioID; Virotrap; effectors; infection biology; interactomics; type-III secretion
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32961832 PMCID: PMC7555288 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21186891
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1The type-III secretion system delivers bacterial effectors into the host cell by acting as a molecular syringe. Chaperones (CHs) are believed to keep type-III effectors (T3Es) in a partially unfolded state inside the bacterium. CHs are released from the T3Es at the sorting platform and are brought into the hollow channel of the needle filament for subsequent release inside the host cell cytoplasm. IM = inner membrane; PG = peptidoglycan; OM = outer membrane.
Figure 2Complementary MS-based co-complex platforms to capture protein–protein interactions. (a) AP-MS; In AP-MS, the bait protein (B) is fused to an epitope tag (T) that has a high affinity to an immobilized antibody. The bait interactome (P1-P3) is co-purified after native cell lysis and subsequently identified through mass spectrometry (MS). (b) Virotrap; Virotrap omits the need for cell lysis by the genetic fusion of a bait to the myristoylated (zigzag line) human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) GAG protein. Expression of the fusion protein elicits the aggregation of the GAG portion at the plasma membrane, enabling the budding of virus-like particles (VLPs) and “trapping” of host preys inside VLPs. Anti-FLAG purification of the VLPs in the culture medium is followed by MS-based analysis of the VLP content (c). BioID; In BioID, the genetic fusion of a protein biotin ligase (BL) to a protein of interest, or bait (B), results in the in vivo biotinylation of interacting prey (P) proteins that are captured after lysis via streptavidin-based purification for subsequent MS-based analysis. Purple circles represent biotin.
Figure 3Defining protein interactions using stable isotope labeling of amino acids in cell culture (SILAC)-based quantitative mass spectrometry. In the representative example shown, SILAC comprises differential metabolic labeling (light and heavy stable isotope-labeled samples) of proteins in distinct experimental conditions (− and + effector expression/delivery, in case of the light and heavy SILAC sample, respectively), followed by mixing of the resulting proteomes and a subsequent affinity- or immunopurification (AP/IP) step targeting the effector bait (B). After digestion of the resulting mixed protein sample, relative protein abundances, and concomitantly, specific effector interactors (significantly enriched as heavy label; P1-P3) can easily be distinguished from contaminants by MS-based analysis. RI = relative intensity.
Overview of type-III effectors host targets identified using AP-MS. Host interactors indicated with an asterisk were validated using co-immunoprecipitation. Underlined host interactors were found in multiple independent interactomics studies.
| Bacterial Pathogen | Type-III Effector | (Candidate) Host | Proteomics Approach | Species or Cell Type | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| HopF2 | AHA2, AHA11, PDR8/PEN3, ERD4, PIP2A, PIP3, Clathrin heavy chain, ADP/ATP Carrier protein, | AP-MS | Arabidopsis | [ |
| HopM1 | UPL1, UPL3, ECM29, proteins related to 26S proteasome non-ATPase regulatory subunits 2, 3, 6, 12, 14, BIG, orthologues of AtMIN7 and AtMIN10 | AP-MS | Tobacco | [ | |
| HopQ1 | TFT1*, TFT2, TFT3, TFT4, TFT5*, TFT6, TFT7, TFT9, TFT10 | AP-MS | Tomato (cv. Moneymaker) | [ | |
|
| RipAY | NbTRX-h11, NbTRX-h09, NbTRX-h10, NbTRX-h15* | AP-MS | Tobacco and Arabidopsis | [ |
|
| 58 | 354 high-confident PPIs | AP-MS | HEK293T | [ |
|
| EspT | HSPD1 | AP-MS | RAW 264.7 and HeLa lysates | [ |
| NleA | LDHB, PHGDH, SEC24B, DLG1, SEC23A, SLC3A2 | ||||
| NleG1 | TUFM, GAPDH, UQCRC2, PKM, MCM7, PRKDC, CPS1, SLC25A6, SLC25A5, SERPINH1, PHGDH, ACADM | ||||
| NleK | HNRNPM | ||||
|
| SopB | CDC42 | AP-MS | HEK293T | [ |
| SspH2 | SUGT1*, AIP, BUB3*, YWHAG, BAG2 | ||||
| SseJ | RHOA, RHOC | ||||
| SspH1 |
| ||||
| AP-MS | RAW 264.7 and HeLa lysates | [ | |||
| SseG | DSP, CAPRIN1 | AP-MS | HEK293T | [ | |
| MYH10, IPO5, PHB2, MYL12B, EPHX1, RANBP6, EIF3B, NNT, SDHA, EIF3A, VDAC1, OCIAD1, NDUFA13, FAM162A, ARL6IP5, GK, API5, EIF3E, COX5B, VDAC2, PSMD12, RAB8A, AP3D1, AGK, CLPTM1L, CUL4B, VAMP3, BAX, CYP51A1, HMOX2, RDH11, TMEM48 | AP-MS | HEK293T | [ | ||
| SseL | OSBPL1A*, TLN1 | AP-MS | HEK293T | [ | |
| NEDD8, TXN, PSME2, S100A6, RCC2, S100A11, PRDC1, UBA52 | AP-MS | RAW 264.7 and HeLa lysates | [ | ||
| SseF | JUP | AP-MS | HEK293T | [ | |
| RBM10, THRAP3, ARGLU1 | AP-MS | HEK293T | [ | ||
| GogA | PRPF31 | AP-MS | RAW 264.7 and HeLa lysates | [ | |
| GtgA | MOGS, SLC25A11, PTGES2, SSR1, ATP5O, USMG5, GPNMB, BCAP29, ALDH3B1, 1700055N04RIK, RPN2, HADHA, YME1L1, ABHD12, IQGAP1, GALNT7, SGPL1, HSD17B12, CYC1, SLC25A12, SLC25A13, ACSL4, GM10250, B4GAINT1, LRRC59 | ||||
| GtgE | LYN, GOPC | ||||
| SpvC | LPXN | ||||
| SrfH | DNAJA1, ABCF2, ERK2*, UPF1, PFKI, MSH2, GM9755, SUCLG1, GALK1, GRPEL1, ACADM, PFKP, EPRS, IDH3B, SLC25A12 | ||||
| SssB | GRN | ||||
| SifA | MYH10, MYL6, MYL12B, EIF3B, RBM10, HM13, EIF3A, CDIPT, EIF5AL1, AP3D1, NDUFA13, TMEM59, ATP5D | AP-MS | HEK293T | [ | |
| PipB2 | GCN1L1, XPO1, | ||||
| SopD2 | MYH10, MYL6, MYL12B, MYH9, RBM10, RAB10, EIF3B, CYFIP1, PHB2, EIF3A, AP2B1, EIF3E, AP3D1, MYO1B, RAB8A, AP3B1, AP2A1 | ||||
| SopA a | TRIM56*, TRIM65*, HDAC10, GSTM3, PCMT1, MAPK3, AP2B1, XRCC5, PPP2R2A, XRCC6 | AP-MS | HeLa | [ | |
| TRIM56*, TRIM65*, EPS15L1, GTF2F2, PDLIM7, CSTF1, GTF2F1, RAD23B, MAPRE1, G6PD | AP-MS | HCT116 | |||
| 15 | 446 high-confident PPIs | AP-MS (delivery of chromosomally tagged T3Es in the context of infection) | HeLa and RAW 264.7 | [ | |
|
| Map | NERF2 | AP-MS | HEK293T | [ |
| EspJ | WDR23 | ||||
| EspL | MAP7* | ||||
| EspX | MAP7 | ||||
| NleA | SEC23A, SEC24B, DLG1 | ||||
| NleB1 | MAP7* | ||||
| NleC | P300 | ||||
| EspZ | CD98*, RPS27A, HSP90AB1, HSP90AA1 | AP-MS | HEK293 | [ |
a only the ten most significant SopA-enriched hits are listed. Candidate host interactors indicated in bold were also found using BioID (see Table 2).
Overview of type-III effectors host targets identified using proximity labeling. Host interactors indicated with an asterisk were validated using co-immunoprecipitation.
| Bacterial Pathogen | Type-III Effector | (Candidate) Host | Proteomics Approach | Species or Cell Type | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| HopF2 | 19 a | BirA* | Arabidopsis | [ |
| AvrPto | 25 a | BirA* | Tobacco | [ | |
|
| SINC | 22 a | BirA* | HeLa | [ |
| IncF | 13 a | APEX2 | HeLa | [ | |
| IncATM | 18 a | ||||
| IncA | 192 a | ||||
|
| SifA | 167 b | BirA* | HEK293T | [ |
| PipB2 | 149 b | ||||
| SseF | 107 b | ||||
| SseG | 145 b | ||||
| SopD2 | 61 b |
a hits listed are top candidates selected by the researchers. b only the ten most significantly enriched hits are listed. Candidate host interactors indicated in bold were also found using AP-MS (see Table 1).
Figure 4Different MS-based co-complex platforms are complementary in nature. Protein identification by AP-MS, BioID, APEX or BioID with linker and endogenous BioID (eBioID) is depicted. B = bait; P = protein interactor (direct/indirect); red and dotted circles represent post-translational modification and weak or dynamic interactors, respectively.