| Literature DB >> 34070659 |
Kirsten Sandvig1,2, Simona Kavaliauskiene1, Tore Skotland1.
Abstract
Protein toxins secreted by bactEntities:
Keywords: Golgi apparatus; endocytosis; endoplasmic reticulum; intracellular transport; lipids; mass spectrometry; membranes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34070659 PMCID: PMC8227415 DOI: 10.3390/toxins13060377
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Figure 1The structure of (A) Shiga toxin (PDB ID:1DM0 [4] and (B) ricin (PDB ID: 2AAI) [5] determined by X-ray crystallography. The enzymatically active A moieties are colored red, and the B moieties are colored green. The A1 fragment of Shiga toxin is a darker red than the A2 fragment. The disulfide bridge linking the enzymatically active part to the rest of the toxin is indicated in yellow and marked with blue circles in the ribbon structure. Reprinted with permission from ref. [6] Copyright 2014 Elsevier.
Figure 2Endocytosis and retrograde transport of Shiga toxin and ricin. Both toxins bind to cell surface receptors. Shiga toxin binds to the glycosphingolipid Gb3, and ricin binds to the terminal galactose of glycolipids or glycoproteins. After being endocytosed, the toxins are transported directly to the Golgi apparatus or via the recycling endosomes before they are further transported to the ER, where the A-moiety (A1-fragment for Shiga toxin) is released and translocated to the cytosol. Once in the cytosol, the active A-chain inhibits protein synthesis by removing one adenine from the 28S RNA of the 60S subunit of the ribosome. Note that recycling and transport to lysosomes are not shown. Reprinted with permission from ref. [16] Copyright 2013 Springer.
Figure 3An overview of endocytic mechanisms in a non-polarized cell (A) and a polarized cell (B). We have indicated some pathways such as clathrin-dependent endocytosis, caveolae (now regarded to be quite stable structures), Cdc42/GRAF1, and others. It should be noted that clathrin-independent uptake is regulated in different ways on the apical and basolateral side as described in the text. It should be noted that in MDCK cells all caveolae are on the basolateral side. Reprinted from an open-access review [27].
Figure 4Intracellular localization of endocytosed Shiga toxin-HRP in A431 cells. Shiga toxin is observed in the Golgi cisternae (GO), the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and the nuclear envelope (NE). Scale bars are 0.5 µm. Reproduced with permission from ref. [12] Copyright 1992 Springer Nature.
Figure 5Illustrations of some lipid structures. On the top, cholesterol (CHOL) is shown, followed by PC 16:0/16:0, which is a lipid species often used in model membranes. However, although PC species are very common in cells, PLs normally contain very little of species with two saturated fatty acyl groups. PS 18:0/18:1 is an example of a PL with 1 saturated and 1 unsaturated fatty acyl group, which is the most common combination of fatty acyl groups in all PL classes. Note that all double bonds in PLs are in a cis-configuration and that the unsaturated fatty acyl group is most often found in the sn-2 position. PE-P 18:0/20:4 is an example of a plasmalogen, i.e., an ether lipid with an alkenyl group, and these lipids often contain polyunsaturated fatty acyl groups in the sn-2 position. The sphingolipid SM d18:1/24:1 is shown with the sphingosine part marked in pink. Note that the N-amidated fatty acyl group is so long that it can theoretically penetrate approximately halfway into the opposite leaflet. These structures were made using the drawing tool available at Lipid Maps (https://www.lipidmaps.org/ (accessed on 24 May 2021)). Reprinted from the open-access review [132].
Figure 6Structure of the Shiga receptor Gb3 (A) and synthesis of Gb3 from its precursors GlcCer and LacCer (B). The letter and number of the carbohydrate structure symbols describe the nature of the glycosidic linkage. Thus, β4 represents a β1-4 linkage to the carbohydrate on the right, and Gb3 is Galα1-4Galβ1-4GlcCer. Redrawn from [6] with approval from Elsevier.
Figure 7Illustration of interdigitation between the 2 membrane leaflets. (A) Multicomponent bilayer where SM d18:1/24:0 are shown as yellow sticks with the 8 last carbon atoms depicted as red balls. Lipids in the outer leaflet are shown as transparent blue glass and lipids in the inner leaflet as transparent grey glass. For clarity, SM d18:1/24:0 are marked only in the central part. (B) Model of a bilayer SM d18:1/16:0 and cholesterol in the outer leaflet and with PS 18:0/18:1 and cholesterol in the inner leaflet. (C) Similar to (B), but SM d18:1/16:0 has been exchanged with SM d18:1/24:0. Blue color is used for the outer leaflet and yellow color is used for the inner leaflet. Note that the N-amidated fatty acyl groups in (C) penetrate deeper into the opposite leaflet than in (B). For more details, see the open-access article [141] from where this figure is reproduced.
Figure 8Binding sites for Gb3 to the B-pentamer of Shiga toxin shown by co-crystallization with a Gb3 analog (PDB protein bank IBOS) [147]. Each of the 5 B-subunits of Shiga toxin has the potential to bind 3 Gb3 molecules. Site 1 and 3 bind to the carbohydrates almost perpendicular to the cell surface, whereas site 2 binds to carbohydrates almost parallel to the membrane surface. Reprinted with permission from ref. [148] Copyright 2015 Elsevier.
Summary of studies aiming to reveal correlations between endocytosis, intracellular transport, and cellular lipids. Upward arrows mark increased level of lipids, binding, or steps leading to toxicity, and downward arrows mark the opposite. The number of arrows indicate the size of the effects. Empty boxes mean not measured, and the sign for similar (~) means no or very minor changes. “Endo → Golgi” means transport from endosomes to the Golgi apparatus. “Golgi → ER” means transport from the Golgi apparatus to the endoplasmic reticulum.
| Treatment | Binding | Uptake 1 | Endo → Golgi | Golgi → ER | Toxicity | Cer | GlcCer | Gb3 | Acyl PL | Ether PL | Other Information |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fumonisin 2 | Stx ↓↓ | ~ | Stx ↓↓↓ | Stx ↓↓↓ | ↓↓ | ↓↓ | ↓↓ | PE ↑↑ | PE ↑↑ | No effect on ricin | |
| PDMP 3 | Stx ↓↓ | ~ | Stx ↓↓↓ | Stx ↓↓ | ~ | ↓↓ | ↓↓ | ~ | ~ | No effect on ricin | |
| HG 4 | Stx ↓ | ~ | ~ | Stx ↓↓ | Stx ↓↓↓ | ~ (↑) | ↓↓ | ↓↓ | PI ↑↑ | PE ↑↑ | No effect on ricin. See also 4 |
| Cell density 5 | Stx ↓↓ | ~ | ~ | ~ | Stx ↓↓ | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | PA↑↑ | PE ↓ | No effect on diphtheria toxin |
| 2-DG 6 | ~ | ~ | ~ | ~ | Stx ↓(↓) | ~ (↑) | Cont. 3% 2-DG | ↓ 1% 2-DG | Inhibits release of Shiga toxin A1 in ER | ||
| FDG 7 | Stx ↓ | ~ | ~ | Stx ↓ | Stx ↓↓↓ | ~ | ↓↓↓ | ↓↓↓ | PI ↑ | Inhibits GlcCer synth. | |
| Lyso PL 8 | Stx ↓↓ | Stx ↓↓↓ | Stx ↓↓↓ | PM lipid packing ↓ | |||||||
| Polyunsaturated FA 9 | Stx ↓ | Stx ↓ | Stx ↓ | Stx ↓↓↓ | Varying effect on other toxins (see 9) | ||||||
| OHOA 10 | ~ | ~ | Ricin ↑↑ | ~ | Ricin ↑↑ | ~ | ~ | ~ (see 11) | ~ (see 11) | PM lipid packing ↓ | |
| DAG kinase and PLD 11 | ~ | Ricin ↑↑ | ~ | Ricin ↑ | ~ | ~ | ~ (most) | ~ | See text for DAG, PA and PG |
1 In this column, the similar sign (~) means uptake changed similar to binding 2 Fumonisin B1: 10 µM, 48 h, HEp-2 cells [164]. 3 DL-threo-1-phenyl-2-decanoylamino-3morpholino-1-propanol: 1 µM, 24 h, HEp-2 cells [164]. 4 sn-1-O-hexadecylglycerol: 20 µM, 24 h, HEp-2 cells. No or only minor effect on cytotoxicity by ricin, cholera toxin, or diphtheria toxin. No effect on transferrin endocytosis. Toxicity also shown for Stx2 in HEp-2, HBMEC and HBMEC-2 cells [176,177]. 5 Data in table shown for HEp-2 cells grown for 1, 2, or 3 days to obtain a cell confluency of 20–30% on Day 1 and 80–90% on Day 3. Data given for changes due to increased cell density. Similar toxicity data were shown in HeLa cells. TLC analyses revealed less Gb3 at high density in HeLa cells and close to similar amounts in HEp-2 cells [33]. 6 2-Deoxy-D-glucose: 10 mM, 4 h and 24 h, HEp-2 cells. Several changes in the lipidome; 1–3% of GSLs contain 2-DG. Similar toxicity observed with Stx2 and diphtheria toxin, but no change in toxicity with ricin. 2-DG also protected HT-20 and SW480 cells against Shiga toxicity. 2-DG decreased transferrin endocytosis, but less than that of Shiga toxin [178]. 7 2-Fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose: 1 mM, 24 h, HEp-2 cells. FDG inhibits GlcCer synthase; effect on GSLs observed after 24 h, not after 4 h. Protection against Stx2 similar to protection against Shiga toxin in HEp-2 cells, but only a very weak protection against ricin and no protection against diphtheria toxin. Similar protection against Shiga toxin in MCF-7, HT-29, and HBMEC cells [179]. 8 Lyso PL: Data are shown for many different lyso PLs, 5–20 µM, 30 min, Hep-2 cells. Largest effects observed with the most conical lyso PL, i.e., those with the largest head groups (e.g., LPI 18:0 with a large head group: LPI > LPS > LPC >LPE > LPA). Symbols in the table are showing changes with LPI 18:0. The effects were reversed by the addition of methyl-β-cyclodextrin. Similar effects observed with Stx2 [180]. In a follow-up article, these lyso PLs were shown to perturb clathrin-mediated endocytosis, with the largest effects observed with the lipids with the largest head groups [181]. 9 Polyunsaturated FA: 50 µM EPA (20:5) or DHA (22:6), 2 days, HEp-2 cells. Similar reduced toxicity observed with cholera toxin, whereas a slightly increased toxicity was observed with ricin. Only minor decrease in transferrin endocytosis [182]. 10 2-Hydroxyoleic acid (Minerval®): 12 µM, 3 h, HeLa cells. OHOA incorporated into ~11% of acylated PL and 10% of ether lipids. A similar toxicity was observed in HEp-2 and U2-OS cells [171]. 11 DAG kinase and PLD (phospholipase D): Use of inhibitors and siRNA to modify the levels of DAG and PA in HEp-2 cells. Inhibitors led to increased transport to Golgi and increased endosome size and tubulation. Effect increased by combining the inhibitors. No changes in recycling or degradation of ricin [183]. See the main text for further details.