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Novel Burkholderia mallei Virulence Factors Linked to Specific Host-Pathogen Protein Interactions

Burkholderia mallei is an infectious intracellular pathogen whose virulence and resistance to antibiotics makes it a potential bioterrorism agent. Given its genetic origin as a commensal soil organism, it is equipped with an extensive and varied set of adapted mechanisms to cope with and modulate ho...

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Autores principales: Memišević, Vesna, Zavaljevski, Nela, Pieper, Rembert, Rajagopala, Seesandra V., Kwon, Keehwan, Townsend, Katherine, Yu, Chenggang, Yu, Xueping, DeShazer, David, Reifman, Jaques, Wallqvist, Anders
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3820922/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23800426
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.M113.029041
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author Memišević, Vesna
Zavaljevski, Nela
Pieper, Rembert
Rajagopala, Seesandra V.
Kwon, Keehwan
Townsend, Katherine
Yu, Chenggang
Yu, Xueping
DeShazer, David
Reifman, Jaques
Wallqvist, Anders
author_facet Memišević, Vesna
Zavaljevski, Nela
Pieper, Rembert
Rajagopala, Seesandra V.
Kwon, Keehwan
Townsend, Katherine
Yu, Chenggang
Yu, Xueping
DeShazer, David
Reifman, Jaques
Wallqvist, Anders
author_sort Memišević, Vesna
collection PubMed
description Burkholderia mallei is an infectious intracellular pathogen whose virulence and resistance to antibiotics makes it a potential bioterrorism agent. Given its genetic origin as a commensal soil organism, it is equipped with an extensive and varied set of adapted mechanisms to cope with and modulate host-cell environments. One essential virulence mechanism constitutes the specialized secretion systems that are designed to penetrate host-cell membranes and insert pathogen proteins directly into the host cell's cytosol. However, the secretion systems' proteins and, in particular, their host targets are largely uncharacterized. Here, we used a combined in silico, in vitro, and in vivo approach to identify B. mallei proteins required for pathogenicity. We used bioinformatics tools, including orthology detection and ab initio predictions of secretion system proteins, as well as published experimental Burkholderia data to initially select a small number of proteins as putative virulence factors. We then used yeast two-hybrid assays against normalized whole human and whole murine proteome libraries to detect and identify interactions among each of these bacterial proteins and host proteins. Analysis of such interactions provided both verification of known virulence factors and identification of three new putative virulence proteins. We successfully created insertion mutants for each of these three proteins using the virulent B. mallei ATCC 23344 strain. We exposed BALB/c mice to mutant strains and the wild-type strain in an aerosol challenge model using lethal B. mallei doses. In each set of experiments, mice exposed to mutant strains survived for the 21-day duration of the experiment, whereas mice exposed to the wild-type strain rapidly died. Given their in vivo role in pathogenicity, and based on the yeast two-hybrid interaction data, these results point to the importance of these pathogen proteins in modulating host ubiquitination pathways, phagosomal escape, and actin-cytoskeleton rearrangement processes.
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spelling pubmed-38209222013-11-15 Novel Burkholderia mallei Virulence Factors Linked to Specific Host-Pathogen Protein Interactions Memišević, Vesna Zavaljevski, Nela Pieper, Rembert Rajagopala, Seesandra V. Kwon, Keehwan Townsend, Katherine Yu, Chenggang Yu, Xueping DeShazer, David Reifman, Jaques Wallqvist, Anders Mol Cell Proteomics Research Burkholderia mallei is an infectious intracellular pathogen whose virulence and resistance to antibiotics makes it a potential bioterrorism agent. Given its genetic origin as a commensal soil organism, it is equipped with an extensive and varied set of adapted mechanisms to cope with and modulate host-cell environments. One essential virulence mechanism constitutes the specialized secretion systems that are designed to penetrate host-cell membranes and insert pathogen proteins directly into the host cell's cytosol. However, the secretion systems' proteins and, in particular, their host targets are largely uncharacterized. Here, we used a combined in silico, in vitro, and in vivo approach to identify B. mallei proteins required for pathogenicity. We used bioinformatics tools, including orthology detection and ab initio predictions of secretion system proteins, as well as published experimental Burkholderia data to initially select a small number of proteins as putative virulence factors. We then used yeast two-hybrid assays against normalized whole human and whole murine proteome libraries to detect and identify interactions among each of these bacterial proteins and host proteins. Analysis of such interactions provided both verification of known virulence factors and identification of three new putative virulence proteins. We successfully created insertion mutants for each of these three proteins using the virulent B. mallei ATCC 23344 strain. We exposed BALB/c mice to mutant strains and the wild-type strain in an aerosol challenge model using lethal B. mallei doses. In each set of experiments, mice exposed to mutant strains survived for the 21-day duration of the experiment, whereas mice exposed to the wild-type strain rapidly died. Given their in vivo role in pathogenicity, and based on the yeast two-hybrid interaction data, these results point to the importance of these pathogen proteins in modulating host ubiquitination pathways, phagosomal escape, and actin-cytoskeleton rearrangement processes. The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2013-11 2013-06-23 /pmc/articles/PMC3820922/ /pubmed/23800426 http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.M113.029041 Text en © 2013 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc. Author's Choice—Final version full access.
spellingShingle Research
Memišević, Vesna
Zavaljevski, Nela
Pieper, Rembert
Rajagopala, Seesandra V.
Kwon, Keehwan
Townsend, Katherine
Yu, Chenggang
Yu, Xueping
DeShazer, David
Reifman, Jaques
Wallqvist, Anders
Novel Burkholderia mallei Virulence Factors Linked to Specific Host-Pathogen Protein Interactions
title Novel Burkholderia mallei Virulence Factors Linked to Specific Host-Pathogen Protein Interactions
title_full Novel Burkholderia mallei Virulence Factors Linked to Specific Host-Pathogen Protein Interactions
title_fullStr Novel Burkholderia mallei Virulence Factors Linked to Specific Host-Pathogen Protein Interactions
title_full_unstemmed Novel Burkholderia mallei Virulence Factors Linked to Specific Host-Pathogen Protein Interactions
title_short Novel Burkholderia mallei Virulence Factors Linked to Specific Host-Pathogen Protein Interactions
title_sort novel burkholderia mallei virulence factors linked to specific host-pathogen protein interactions
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3820922/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23800426
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.M113.029041
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