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Signal Transduction & Virulence

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Presentation on theme: "Signal Transduction & Virulence"— Presentation transcript:

1 Signal Transduction & Virulence
Low [Mg++] PhoQ pag (+) PhoP P (-) DBD prg

2 SALMONELLOSIS gastroenteritis and enteric fever
caused by nontyphoid Salmonella increased significantly in the last decade (0.8 to 3.7 million cases per yr)

3 Salmonella enterica (serovar Typhimurium) = S. typhimurium
INFECTIOUS AGENT Salmonella enterica (serovar Typhimurium) = S. typhimurium intracellular pathogen usually results in self-limiting gastroenteritis sometimes results in bacteremia, fever & other complications

4 a severe systemic disease of humans causes a similar disease in mice
Typhoid fever a severe systemic disease of humans caused by S. typhi Research Model S. typhimurium causes a similar disease in mice

5 S. typhimurium to cause disease must
survive and propagate in a wide range of tissues to survive and propagate, S. typhimurium must circumvent or hijack host immune system uses macrophages to enter the bloodstream HOW?

6 Ingestion of contaminated food or water But also, acidic macrophage
Infection Ingestion of contaminated food or water must survive lysozyme in saliva acid stomach alkaline bile salts anaerobiosis high osmolarity low iron content But also, acidic macrophage HOW?

7 INVASION after surviving the trip, cells colonize the small intestine,
invading the M cells (specialized epithelial cells that take up luminal antigens) Invasion occurs by Bacterial-mediated Endocytosis Two-steps i) attachment ii) entry

8 Attachment LUMEN vili M cell

9 Ruffle formation & phagocytosis
phagosome ruffles LUMEN vili epithelial cell M cell macrophages

10 Entry LUMEN phagosome macrophages

11 M cell destroyed Entrance to Reticuloendothelial System to bloodstream

12 How does the pathogen Facilitate entry into M cells?
Survival in phagosomes? Survival in macrophages 1. Type III secretory apparatus 2. Type III secretory apparatus 3. Type III secretory apparatus Signal transduction and gene expression

13 Phenotypic effects of Type III secretion mechanisms on host cells

14 facilitate entry into M cells?
How does the pathogen facilitate entry into M cells? Type 3 secretory apparatus phagosome ruffles LUMEN M cell

15 How does the pathogen facilitate entry into M cells?
Sip Sip inside M cell Sip Sip Sip LPS outer membrane Type III Apparatus periplasm cytoplasmic membrane SPI 1 large pathogenicity island includes inv & spa virulence genes encode a Type III secretory system which exports Sip proteins through bacterial cell surface into the host M cell Sip proteins facilitate invasion e.g. ruffling cytoplasm } invA spa sip (exported) SPI 1

16 kill bacteria in phagosomes?
Why don’t lysosomes kill bacteria in phagosomes? phagosome Type 3 secretory apparatus Secretes proteins into the M cell cytosol Inhibiting phagosome-lysosome fusion LUMEN

17 } How does the pathogen facilitate entry into macrophages?
Inside macrophage EP EP EP LPS outer membrane Type III Apparatus periplasm cytoplasmic membrane cytoplasm } another Type III secretory system (prgHIKL) exports proteins (EPs) through bacterial cell surface into the macrophage Facilitates phagocytosis by macrophage prgHIKL also encoded by SPI 1 prgHIJK EPs SPI 1

18 Survive in macrophages?
How does the pathogen Survive in macrophages? macrophages

19 How does the pathogen survive the adverse environment
once inside the macrophage, S. typhimurium represses genes necessary for entry (e.g., prgHIJK) & activates genes necessary to defeat macrophage defenses How does the pathogen survive the adverse environment of the macrophage?

20 How does the pathogen “sense” that is inside the macrophage?

21 (transcription factor) phosphodonor = phosphorylated sensor
Two-component Signal Transduction SENSOR (receptor) Histidine autokinase phosphodonor = ATP RESPONSE REGULATOR (transcription factor) Aspartate autokinase phosphodonor = phosphorylated sensor

22 Two-component Signal Transduction
An example

23 = ATP P P transcription repression ADP sensor phospho-donor RNAP RR
DBD

24 sensor P ADP = ATP phospho-donor transcription activation RNAP RR DBD

25 Very Short List of VIRULENCE FACTORS CONTROLLED BY
2-COMPONENT SIGNALING CHEMOTAXIS - Escherichia coli & others PERTUSSIS TOXIN - Bordetella pertussis CAPSULE - Pseudomonas aeruginosa PhoPQ regulon - Salmonella typhimurium

26 { = ATP P P PhoP prg (PhoP-repressed genes) ADP sensor phospho-donor
RNAP P RR DBD { PhoP prg (PhoP-repressed genes)

27 (PhoP-activated genes)
sensor P ADP = ATP phospho-donor RNAP P RR DBD { PhoP pag (PhoP-activated genes)

28 signal transduction pathway PhoP = response regulator
PhoPQ a two-component signal transduction pathway PhoQ = sensor PhoP = response regulator represses prg activates pag Low [Mg++] PhoQ pag (+) P PhoP (-) DBD prg

29 prg (PhoP-repressed genes) pag (PhoP-activated genes)
required for entry into M cells & macrophages (inv, spa, sip, prgHIJK) pag (PhoP-activated genes) survival in macrophages ASPs & anti-defensins [defensins are antimicrobial peptides produced by macrophages]

30 Evidence that PhoPQ system is required for virulence
mutants i) are avirulent in mice ii) do not survive macrophages iii) are sensitive to low pH & defensins


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