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Global Functional Analyses of Cellular Responses to Pore-Forming Toxins

Here we present the first global functional analysis of cellular responses to pore-forming toxins (PFTs). PFTs are uniquely important bacterial virulence factors, comprising the single largest class of bacterial protein toxins and being important for the pathogenesis in humans of many Gram positive...

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Autores principales: Kao, Cheng-Yuan, Los, Ferdinand C. O., Huffman, Danielle L., Wachi, Shinichiro, Kloft, Nicole, Husmann, Matthias, Karabrahimi, Valbona, Schwartz, Jean-Louis, Bellier, Audrey, Ha, Christine, Sagong, Youn, Fan, Hui, Ghosh, Partho, Hsieh, Mindy, Hsu, Chih-Shen, Chen, Li, Aroian, Raffi V.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3048360/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21408619
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1001314
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author Kao, Cheng-Yuan
Los, Ferdinand C. O.
Huffman, Danielle L.
Wachi, Shinichiro
Kloft, Nicole
Husmann, Matthias
Karabrahimi, Valbona
Schwartz, Jean-Louis
Bellier, Audrey
Ha, Christine
Sagong, Youn
Fan, Hui
Ghosh, Partho
Hsieh, Mindy
Hsu, Chih-Shen
Chen, Li
Aroian, Raffi V.
author_facet Kao, Cheng-Yuan
Los, Ferdinand C. O.
Huffman, Danielle L.
Wachi, Shinichiro
Kloft, Nicole
Husmann, Matthias
Karabrahimi, Valbona
Schwartz, Jean-Louis
Bellier, Audrey
Ha, Christine
Sagong, Youn
Fan, Hui
Ghosh, Partho
Hsieh, Mindy
Hsu, Chih-Shen
Chen, Li
Aroian, Raffi V.
author_sort Kao, Cheng-Yuan
collection PubMed
description Here we present the first global functional analysis of cellular responses to pore-forming toxins (PFTs). PFTs are uniquely important bacterial virulence factors, comprising the single largest class of bacterial protein toxins and being important for the pathogenesis in humans of many Gram positive and Gram negative bacteria. Their mode of action is deceptively simple, poking holes in the plasma membrane of cells. The scattered studies to date of PFT-host cell interactions indicate a handful of genes are involved in cellular defenses to PFTs. How many genes are involved in cellular defenses against PFTs and how cellular defenses are coordinated are unknown. To address these questions, we performed the first genome-wide RNA interference (RNAi) screen for genes that, when knocked down, result in hypersensitivity to a PFT. This screen identifies 106 genes (∼0.5% of genome) in seven functional groups that protect Caenorhabditis elegans from PFT attack. Interactome analyses of these 106 genes suggest that two previously identified mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathways, one (p38) studied in detail and the other (JNK) not, form a core PFT defense network. Additional microarray, real-time PCR, and functional studies reveal that the JNK MAPK pathway, but not the p38 MAPK pathway, is a key central regulator of PFT-induced transcriptional and functional responses. We find C. elegans activator protein 1 (AP-1; c-jun, c-fos) is a downstream target of the JNK-mediated PFT protection pathway, protects C. elegans against both small-pore and large-pore PFTs and protects human cells against a large-pore PFT. This in vivo RNAi genomic study of PFT responses proves that cellular commitment to PFT defenses is enormous, demonstrates the JNK MAPK pathway as a key regulator of transcriptionally-induced PFT defenses, and identifies AP-1 as the first cellular component broadly important for defense against large- and small-pore PFTs.
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spelling pubmed-30483602011-03-15 Global Functional Analyses of Cellular Responses to Pore-Forming Toxins Kao, Cheng-Yuan Los, Ferdinand C. O. Huffman, Danielle L. Wachi, Shinichiro Kloft, Nicole Husmann, Matthias Karabrahimi, Valbona Schwartz, Jean-Louis Bellier, Audrey Ha, Christine Sagong, Youn Fan, Hui Ghosh, Partho Hsieh, Mindy Hsu, Chih-Shen Chen, Li Aroian, Raffi V. PLoS Pathog Research Article Here we present the first global functional analysis of cellular responses to pore-forming toxins (PFTs). PFTs are uniquely important bacterial virulence factors, comprising the single largest class of bacterial protein toxins and being important for the pathogenesis in humans of many Gram positive and Gram negative bacteria. Their mode of action is deceptively simple, poking holes in the plasma membrane of cells. The scattered studies to date of PFT-host cell interactions indicate a handful of genes are involved in cellular defenses to PFTs. How many genes are involved in cellular defenses against PFTs and how cellular defenses are coordinated are unknown. To address these questions, we performed the first genome-wide RNA interference (RNAi) screen for genes that, when knocked down, result in hypersensitivity to a PFT. This screen identifies 106 genes (∼0.5% of genome) in seven functional groups that protect Caenorhabditis elegans from PFT attack. Interactome analyses of these 106 genes suggest that two previously identified mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathways, one (p38) studied in detail and the other (JNK) not, form a core PFT defense network. Additional microarray, real-time PCR, and functional studies reveal that the JNK MAPK pathway, but not the p38 MAPK pathway, is a key central regulator of PFT-induced transcriptional and functional responses. We find C. elegans activator protein 1 (AP-1; c-jun, c-fos) is a downstream target of the JNK-mediated PFT protection pathway, protects C. elegans against both small-pore and large-pore PFTs and protects human cells against a large-pore PFT. This in vivo RNAi genomic study of PFT responses proves that cellular commitment to PFT defenses is enormous, demonstrates the JNK MAPK pathway as a key regulator of transcriptionally-induced PFT defenses, and identifies AP-1 as the first cellular component broadly important for defense against large- and small-pore PFTs. Public Library of Science 2011-03-03 /pmc/articles/PMC3048360/ /pubmed/21408619 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1001314 Text en Kao et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kao, Cheng-Yuan
Los, Ferdinand C. O.
Huffman, Danielle L.
Wachi, Shinichiro
Kloft, Nicole
Husmann, Matthias
Karabrahimi, Valbona
Schwartz, Jean-Louis
Bellier, Audrey
Ha, Christine
Sagong, Youn
Fan, Hui
Ghosh, Partho
Hsieh, Mindy
Hsu, Chih-Shen
Chen, Li
Aroian, Raffi V.
Global Functional Analyses of Cellular Responses to Pore-Forming Toxins
title Global Functional Analyses of Cellular Responses to Pore-Forming Toxins
title_full Global Functional Analyses of Cellular Responses to Pore-Forming Toxins
title_fullStr Global Functional Analyses of Cellular Responses to Pore-Forming Toxins
title_full_unstemmed Global Functional Analyses of Cellular Responses to Pore-Forming Toxins
title_short Global Functional Analyses of Cellular Responses to Pore-Forming Toxins
title_sort global functional analyses of cellular responses to pore-forming toxins
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3048360/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21408619
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1001314
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