The tail of Listeria monocytogenes : Lessons learned from a bacterial pathogen (cont.)

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The tail of Listeria monocytogenes : Lessons learned from a bacterial pathogen (cont.) 1. How do Listeria make tails Nucleation, growth 2. Role of ABPs in tail formation 3. Other motile pathogens

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The tail of Listeria monocytogenes : Lessons learned from a bacterial pathogen (cont.). 1. How do Listeria make tails Nucleation, growth 2. Role of ABPs in tail formation 3. Other motile pathogens. How does actin polymerization drive the movement of Listeria?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The tail of Listeria monocytogenes : Lessons learned from a bacterial pathogen (cont.)

Page 1: The tail of Listeria  monocytogenes  : Lessons learned from a bacterial pathogen  (cont.)

The tail of Listeria monocytogenes : Lessons learned from a bacterial pathogen (cont.)

1. How do Listeria make tailsNucleation, growth

2. Role of ABPs in tail formation3. Other motile pathogens

Page 2: The tail of Listeria  monocytogenes  : Lessons learned from a bacterial pathogen  (cont.)

How does actin polymerization drive the movement of Listeria?

• 1. “Insertional” actin polymerization occurs at back edge of bacterium– Polymerization fluorescently

labeled actin shows brighter regions at back edge

• 2. Photobleaching experiments show that the tail remains stationary as bacterium moves forward

• 3. Depolymerization occurs at the same rate throughout the tail– tail length is usually constant– a decreasing gradient of filament

density exists from the front to rear of the tail

– F-actin half life = 30 sec

Distance um from backFi

lam

ent d

ensi

ty

addition

loss

Page 3: The tail of Listeria  monocytogenes  : Lessons learned from a bacterial pathogen  (cont.)

ActA is sufficient for actin polymerization

• Listeria can still move is the presence of drugs that inhibit protein synthesis

• In the early 90’s used a genetic screen in mutant Listeria that could not form tails, and “normal” ones

• Found a single gene actA - encodes a bacterial surface protein ActA

• Can induce tail formation in:– Immotile Listeria, other bacteria, polystyrene beads

Bact. Memb. anchor sequence

N term C term

Signal peptide Proline-rich repeats

Page 4: The tail of Listeria  monocytogenes  : Lessons learned from a bacterial pathogen  (cont.)

• ActA does not bind directly to actin• Which factors localize at the back of Listeria but not in the tail?

– 1. Immunofluorescence studies found VASP (vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein)

– 2. Profilin

• VASP binds to the proline-rich region of ActA and binds actin– Discovered by looking for host cell factors that would bind to ActA– Associated with F-actin and focal adhesions in lamellae

• Profilin binds VASP

Which factors enhance actin polymerization ?

Bact. Memb. anchor sequence

N term C term

Signal peptide

Proline-rich repeats

VASP

P

Page 5: The tail of Listeria  monocytogenes  : Lessons learned from a bacterial pathogen  (cont.)

How is polymerization enhanced?

• VASP and profilin accelerate filament elongation but are not nucleators– Evidence: Actin clouds form in profilin depleted cytoplasmic extracts– VASP-actin complexes have no nucleating activity

• Poly proline regions bind multiple VASP molecules– Evidence: Bacterial speed is proportional to number of proline-rich

repeats in ActA

• VASP recruits profilin to the bacterial surface

Page 6: The tail of Listeria  monocytogenes  : Lessons learned from a bacterial pathogen  (cont.)

GFP-profilin concentration at back edge is proportional to speed

• Profilin accumulates as speed increases– (and vice versa)

• Only accumulates on moving bacteria

Geese, et al., 2000JCS 113 p.1415

Page 7: The tail of Listeria  monocytogenes  : Lessons learned from a bacterial pathogen  (cont.)

• Arp2/3 isolated by column chromatography from platelet cytoplasm (Welch et al., 1997)

• Nucleation activity of Arp2/3 is greatly enhanced by ActA– in eukaryotic cells and is essential for Listeria tail formation

• The amino-terminal domain of ActA is sufficient

ARP2/3 nucleates actin filament growth in Listeria

Page 8: The tail of Listeria  monocytogenes  : Lessons learned from a bacterial pathogen  (cont.)

• “Y” shaped cross-links containing ARP2/3 are present

• Evidence of other kinds of crosslinking exists

Organization of actin filaments in Listeria is similar to that of

lamellipodia

Page 9: The tail of Listeria  monocytogenes  : Lessons learned from a bacterial pathogen  (cont.)

• Cap Z and gelsolin – (+end cappers) found throughout tail – Limit growth of actin filaments– Both ABPs are enriched at bacterial surface but ActA is thought to

suppress their activities here

• ADF/Cofilin - found throughout tail – important for increasing actin filament turnover by 10-100 times

compared with in vitro– Immunodepletion leads to formation of very long tails - actin turnover

rate?– Addition of excess decreases tail length – actin turnover rate?

• Crosslinking proteins -eg. Fimbrin, -actinin - found throughout tail, structural role– introduction of dominant negative fragment of -actinin stops bacteria

movement

Capping and severing ABPs are found in Listeria tails

Page 10: The tail of Listeria  monocytogenes  : Lessons learned from a bacterial pathogen  (cont.)

Other motile pathogens

• Shigella – infects colon epithelial cells, causes bacillary dysentery

• Vaccinia virus of the poxvirus family – e.g. variola virus (small pox)

• Entry into cells and nucleation of tail formation differs but general principle is the same

Page 11: The tail of Listeria  monocytogenes  : Lessons learned from a bacterial pathogen  (cont.)

Mechanisms of tail formationby other pathogens

• Arp2/3 activation achieved differently– Listeria –ActA

– Shigella and Vaccinia – N-WASP

• Shigella – N-WASP is recruited by IcsA

• Vaccinia – A36R recruits N-WASP indirectly via Nck and WIP– Requires phosphorylation of tyrosine

112 on A36R

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Minimal requirements for Listeria rocketing

• In physiological ionic strength buffer (pH 7.5) and F-actin 7.5 M • ARP2/3 0.1M and an activator - Act-A, N-WASp • Profilin 2.5 M • Gelsolin• Capping protein 0.05 M • ADF/Cofilin 5 M • X-linker (a-actinin) 0.25 M • VASP 0.5M

• From: Loisel et al., 1999, Nature, 401, p.613

Page 13: The tail of Listeria  monocytogenes  : Lessons learned from a bacterial pathogen  (cont.)

More motile pathogens

• Rickettsia – causes Rocky Mountain spotted fever and others

• Tails are different from Listeria, Shigella, Vaccinia

• Composed of long actin filaments

• NOT nucleated by Arp2/3

• Movement is ~ x3 slower

• Actin filaments are x3 more stable

Page 14: The tail of Listeria  monocytogenes  : Lessons learned from a bacterial pathogen  (cont.)

Surfing pathogens

• EPEC –enteropathogenic Escherichia coli – Causes infantile diarrhoea

• Infects cells by inserting a bacterial protein (intimin - Tir) into host cell membrane

• Bacterium binds to Tir• Phosphorylation of Tyr474 in

the cytoplasmic tail of Tir induces actin polymerization – forms a pedestal

• Pedestal is dynamic – allowing bacterium to surf

• Functional relevance unknown