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Mycoplasma promotes malignant transformation in vivo, and its DnaK, a bacterial chaperone protein, has broad oncogenic properties

We isolated a strain of human mycoplasma that promotes lymphomagenesis in SCID mice, pointing to a p53-dependent mechanism similar to lymphomagenesis in uninfected p53(−/−) SCID mice. Additionally, mycoplasma infection in vitro reduces p53 activity. Immunoprecipitation of p53 in mycoplasma-infected...

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Autores principales: Zella, Davide, Curreli, Sabrina, Benedetti, Francesca, Krishnan, Selvi, Cocchi, Fiorenza, Latinovic, Olga S., Denaro, Frank, Romerio, Fabio, Djavani, Mahmoud, Charurat, Man E., Bryant, Joseph L., Tettelin, Hervé, Gallo, Robert C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: National Academy of Sciences 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6304983/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30509983
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1815660115
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author Zella, Davide
Curreli, Sabrina
Benedetti, Francesca
Krishnan, Selvi
Cocchi, Fiorenza
Latinovic, Olga S.
Denaro, Frank
Romerio, Fabio
Djavani, Mahmoud
Charurat, Man E.
Bryant, Joseph L.
Tettelin, Hervé
Gallo, Robert C.
author_facet Zella, Davide
Curreli, Sabrina
Benedetti, Francesca
Krishnan, Selvi
Cocchi, Fiorenza
Latinovic, Olga S.
Denaro, Frank
Romerio, Fabio
Djavani, Mahmoud
Charurat, Man E.
Bryant, Joseph L.
Tettelin, Hervé
Gallo, Robert C.
author_sort Zella, Davide
collection PubMed
description We isolated a strain of human mycoplasma that promotes lymphomagenesis in SCID mice, pointing to a p53-dependent mechanism similar to lymphomagenesis in uninfected p53(−/−) SCID mice. Additionally, mycoplasma infection in vitro reduces p53 activity. Immunoprecipitation of p53 in mycoplasma-infected cells identified several mycoplasma proteins, including DnaK, a member of the Hsp70 chaperon family. We focused on DnaK because of its ability to interact with proteins. We demonstrate that mycoplasma DnaK interacts with and reduces the activities of human proteins involved in critical cellular pathways, including DNA-PK and PARP1, which are required for efficient DNA repair, and binds to USP10 (a key p53 regulator), impairing p53-dependent anticancer functions. This also reduced the efficacy of anticancer drugs that depend on p53 to exert their effect. mycoplasma was detected early in the infected mice, but only low copy numbers of mycoplasma DnaK DNA sequences were found in some primary and secondary tumors, pointing toward a hit-and-run/hide mechanism of transformation. Uninfected bystander cells took up exogenous DnaK, suggesting a possible paracrine function in promoting malignant transformation, over and above cells infected with the mycoplasma. Phylogenetic amino acid analysis shows that other bacteria associated with human cancers have similar DnaKs, consistent with a common mechanism of cellular transformation mediated through disruption of DNA-repair mechanisms, as well as p53 dysregulation, that also results in cancer-drug resistance. This suggests that the oncogenic properties of certain bacteria are DnaK-mediated.
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spelling pubmed-63049832018-12-28 Mycoplasma promotes malignant transformation in vivo, and its DnaK, a bacterial chaperone protein, has broad oncogenic properties Zella, Davide Curreli, Sabrina Benedetti, Francesca Krishnan, Selvi Cocchi, Fiorenza Latinovic, Olga S. Denaro, Frank Romerio, Fabio Djavani, Mahmoud Charurat, Man E. Bryant, Joseph L. Tettelin, Hervé Gallo, Robert C. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A PNAS Plus We isolated a strain of human mycoplasma that promotes lymphomagenesis in SCID mice, pointing to a p53-dependent mechanism similar to lymphomagenesis in uninfected p53(−/−) SCID mice. Additionally, mycoplasma infection in vitro reduces p53 activity. Immunoprecipitation of p53 in mycoplasma-infected cells identified several mycoplasma proteins, including DnaK, a member of the Hsp70 chaperon family. We focused on DnaK because of its ability to interact with proteins. We demonstrate that mycoplasma DnaK interacts with and reduces the activities of human proteins involved in critical cellular pathways, including DNA-PK and PARP1, which are required for efficient DNA repair, and binds to USP10 (a key p53 regulator), impairing p53-dependent anticancer functions. This also reduced the efficacy of anticancer drugs that depend on p53 to exert their effect. mycoplasma was detected early in the infected mice, but only low copy numbers of mycoplasma DnaK DNA sequences were found in some primary and secondary tumors, pointing toward a hit-and-run/hide mechanism of transformation. Uninfected bystander cells took up exogenous DnaK, suggesting a possible paracrine function in promoting malignant transformation, over and above cells infected with the mycoplasma. Phylogenetic amino acid analysis shows that other bacteria associated with human cancers have similar DnaKs, consistent with a common mechanism of cellular transformation mediated through disruption of DNA-repair mechanisms, as well as p53 dysregulation, that also results in cancer-drug resistance. This suggests that the oncogenic properties of certain bacteria are DnaK-mediated. National Academy of Sciences 2018-12-18 2018-12-03 /pmc/articles/PMC6304983/ /pubmed/30509983 http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1815660115 Text en Copyright © 2018 the Author(s). Published by PNAS. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This open access article is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License 4.0 (CC BY-NC-ND) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) .
spellingShingle PNAS Plus
Zella, Davide
Curreli, Sabrina
Benedetti, Francesca
Krishnan, Selvi
Cocchi, Fiorenza
Latinovic, Olga S.
Denaro, Frank
Romerio, Fabio
Djavani, Mahmoud
Charurat, Man E.
Bryant, Joseph L.
Tettelin, Hervé
Gallo, Robert C.
Mycoplasma promotes malignant transformation in vivo, and its DnaK, a bacterial chaperone protein, has broad oncogenic properties
title Mycoplasma promotes malignant transformation in vivo, and its DnaK, a bacterial chaperone protein, has broad oncogenic properties
title_full Mycoplasma promotes malignant transformation in vivo, and its DnaK, a bacterial chaperone protein, has broad oncogenic properties
title_fullStr Mycoplasma promotes malignant transformation in vivo, and its DnaK, a bacterial chaperone protein, has broad oncogenic properties
title_full_unstemmed Mycoplasma promotes malignant transformation in vivo, and its DnaK, a bacterial chaperone protein, has broad oncogenic properties
title_short Mycoplasma promotes malignant transformation in vivo, and its DnaK, a bacterial chaperone protein, has broad oncogenic properties
title_sort mycoplasma promotes malignant transformation in vivo, and its dnak, a bacterial chaperone protein, has broad oncogenic properties
topic PNAS Plus
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6304983/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30509983
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1815660115
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