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Rickettsia typhi Possesses Phospholipase A(2) Enzymes that Are Involved in Infection of Host Cells

The long-standing proposal that phospholipase A(2) (PLA(2)) enzymes are involved in rickettsial infection of host cells has been given support by the recent characterization of a patatin phospholipase (Pat2) with PLA(2) activity from the pathogens Rickettsia prowazekii and R. typhi. However, pat2 is...

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Autores principales: Rahman, M. Sayeedur, Gillespie, Joseph J., Kaur, Simran Jeet, Sears, Khandra T., Ceraul, Shane M., Beier-Sexton, Magda, Azad, Abdu F.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3688537/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23818842
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1003399
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author Rahman, M. Sayeedur
Gillespie, Joseph J.
Kaur, Simran Jeet
Sears, Khandra T.
Ceraul, Shane M.
Beier-Sexton, Magda
Azad, Abdu F.
author_facet Rahman, M. Sayeedur
Gillespie, Joseph J.
Kaur, Simran Jeet
Sears, Khandra T.
Ceraul, Shane M.
Beier-Sexton, Magda
Azad, Abdu F.
author_sort Rahman, M. Sayeedur
collection PubMed
description The long-standing proposal that phospholipase A(2) (PLA(2)) enzymes are involved in rickettsial infection of host cells has been given support by the recent characterization of a patatin phospholipase (Pat2) with PLA(2) activity from the pathogens Rickettsia prowazekii and R. typhi. However, pat2 is not encoded in all Rickettsia genomes; yet another uncharacterized patatin (Pat1) is indeed ubiquitous. Here, evolutionary analysis of both patatins across 46 Rickettsia genomes revealed 1) pat1 and pat2 loci are syntenic across all genomes, 2) both Pat1 and Pat2 do not contain predicted Sec-dependent signal sequences, 3) pat2 has been pseudogenized multiple times in rickettsial evolution, and 4) ubiquitous pat1 forms two divergent groups (pat1A and pat1B) with strong evidence for recombination between pat1B and plasmid-encoded homologs. In light of these findings, we extended the characterization of R. typhi Pat1 and Pat2 proteins and determined their role in the infection process. As previously demonstrated for Pat2, we determined that 1) Pat1 is expressed and secreted into the host cytoplasm during R. typhi infection, 2) expression of recombinant Pat1 is cytotoxic to yeast cells, 3) recombinant Pat1 possesses PLA(2) activity that requires a host cofactor, and 4) both Pat1 cytotoxicity and PLA(2) activity were reduced by PLA(2) inhibitors and abolished by site-directed mutagenesis of catalytic Ser/Asp residues. To ascertain the role of Pat1 and Pat2 in R. typhi infection, antibodies to both proteins were used to pretreat rickettsiae. Subsequent invasion and plaque assays both indicated a significant decrease in R. typhi infection compared to that by pre-immune IgG. Furthermore, antibody-pretreatment of R. typhi blocked/delayed phagosomal escapes. Together, these data suggest both enzymes are involved early in the infection process. Collectively, our study suggests that R. typhi utilizes two evolutionary divergent patatin phospholipases to support its intracellular life cycle, a mechanism distinguishing it from other rickettsial species.
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spelling pubmed-36885372013-07-01 Rickettsia typhi Possesses Phospholipase A(2) Enzymes that Are Involved in Infection of Host Cells Rahman, M. Sayeedur Gillespie, Joseph J. Kaur, Simran Jeet Sears, Khandra T. Ceraul, Shane M. Beier-Sexton, Magda Azad, Abdu F. PLoS Pathog Research Article The long-standing proposal that phospholipase A(2) (PLA(2)) enzymes are involved in rickettsial infection of host cells has been given support by the recent characterization of a patatin phospholipase (Pat2) with PLA(2) activity from the pathogens Rickettsia prowazekii and R. typhi. However, pat2 is not encoded in all Rickettsia genomes; yet another uncharacterized patatin (Pat1) is indeed ubiquitous. Here, evolutionary analysis of both patatins across 46 Rickettsia genomes revealed 1) pat1 and pat2 loci are syntenic across all genomes, 2) both Pat1 and Pat2 do not contain predicted Sec-dependent signal sequences, 3) pat2 has been pseudogenized multiple times in rickettsial evolution, and 4) ubiquitous pat1 forms two divergent groups (pat1A and pat1B) with strong evidence for recombination between pat1B and plasmid-encoded homologs. In light of these findings, we extended the characterization of R. typhi Pat1 and Pat2 proteins and determined their role in the infection process. As previously demonstrated for Pat2, we determined that 1) Pat1 is expressed and secreted into the host cytoplasm during R. typhi infection, 2) expression of recombinant Pat1 is cytotoxic to yeast cells, 3) recombinant Pat1 possesses PLA(2) activity that requires a host cofactor, and 4) both Pat1 cytotoxicity and PLA(2) activity were reduced by PLA(2) inhibitors and abolished by site-directed mutagenesis of catalytic Ser/Asp residues. To ascertain the role of Pat1 and Pat2 in R. typhi infection, antibodies to both proteins were used to pretreat rickettsiae. Subsequent invasion and plaque assays both indicated a significant decrease in R. typhi infection compared to that by pre-immune IgG. Furthermore, antibody-pretreatment of R. typhi blocked/delayed phagosomal escapes. Together, these data suggest both enzymes are involved early in the infection process. Collectively, our study suggests that R. typhi utilizes two evolutionary divergent patatin phospholipases to support its intracellular life cycle, a mechanism distinguishing it from other rickettsial species. Public Library of Science 2013-06-20 /pmc/articles/PMC3688537/ /pubmed/23818842 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1003399 Text en © 2013 Rahman 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
Rahman, M. Sayeedur
Gillespie, Joseph J.
Kaur, Simran Jeet
Sears, Khandra T.
Ceraul, Shane M.
Beier-Sexton, Magda
Azad, Abdu F.
Rickettsia typhi Possesses Phospholipase A(2) Enzymes that Are Involved in Infection of Host Cells
title Rickettsia typhi Possesses Phospholipase A(2) Enzymes that Are Involved in Infection of Host Cells
title_full Rickettsia typhi Possesses Phospholipase A(2) Enzymes that Are Involved in Infection of Host Cells
title_fullStr Rickettsia typhi Possesses Phospholipase A(2) Enzymes that Are Involved in Infection of Host Cells
title_full_unstemmed Rickettsia typhi Possesses Phospholipase A(2) Enzymes that Are Involved in Infection of Host Cells
title_short Rickettsia typhi Possesses Phospholipase A(2) Enzymes that Are Involved in Infection of Host Cells
title_sort rickettsia typhi possesses phospholipase a(2) enzymes that are involved in infection of host cells
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3688537/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23818842
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1003399
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