Outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) are an emerging research field due to their multifactorial composition and involvement in interspecies and intraspecies communication. Recent studies indicate that vesicle release by Gram-negative bacterial pathogens is increased during in vivo colonization, as exemplified by the facultative human pathogen Vibrio cholerae upon oral ingestion by the host. In this study, we investigate the fate of OMVs produced by the Gram-negative facultative pathogen V. cholerae. We show that vesicles produced by the clinically relevant El Tor biotype are readily taken up by human intestinal cell lines. We identify outer membrane porins of V. cholerae, i.e., OmpU and OmpT, as the required surface effectors on OMVs for cellular uptake, and we pinpoint the uptake mechanism as caveolin-mediated endocytosis. Furthermore, we show that OMVs derived from V. cholerae grown under virulence-inducing conditions act as potent vehicles for delivery of bioactive cholera toxin to intestinal epithelial cells. In contrast to free cholera toxin secreted via the type II secretion system, OMV-associated cholera toxin is protected from degradation by intestinal proteases. Taken together, these data show that OMV-associated cholera toxin can sustain longer periods in the intestinal tract and preserve toxin effects, as indicated by a prolonged increase of cAMP levels in the intestinal tissue. IMPORTANCE Cholera is still a massive global health burden because it causes large outbreaks with millions of infections and thousands of deaths every year. Several studies have contributed to the knowledge of this pathogen, although key parts are still missing. We aim to broaden our understanding of Vibrio cholerae infections, virulence, and toxicity by drawing attention to the involvement of OMVs in these core processes. Upon host entry, V. cholerae increases secretion of OMVs, which can carry the main virulence factor, cholera toxin, to distant host intestinal cells. We show that specific outer membrane porins on the vesicle surface mediate endocytosis of the vesicles into intestinal cells. With protection by the vesicles, cholera toxin activity endures even in the presence of intestinal proteases. It is tempting to hypothesize that the extended half-life of vesicle-associated cholera toxin allows it to target host cells distant from the primary colonization sites.
The prevailing pandemic of SARS-CoV-2 highlights the desperate need of alternative vaccine-platforms, which are safe, effective, and can be modified to carry antigens of emerging pathogens. The current SARS-CoV-2 vaccines based on mRNA and adenoviral vector technology meet some of these criteria but still face limitations regarding administration route, mass production, stability, and storage. Herein, we introduce a novel SARS-CoV-2 vaccine candidate based on bacterial outer membrane vesicles (OMVs). Vibrio cholerae and enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) have been genetically modified to produce increased amounts of detoxified OMVs decorated with the receptor binding domain (RBD) of the SARS-CoV-2 Spike protein. Intranasal immunization with RBD-decorated OMVs induced not only a robust immune response against the bacterial outer membrane components but also detectable antibody titers against the Spike protein. Cell culture infection assays using a Spike-pseudotyped lentivirus confirmed the presence of SARS-CoV-2 neutralizing antibodies. Highest titers against the SARS-CoV-2 Spike protein and most potent neutralization activity were observed for an alternating immunization regimen using RBD-decorated OMVs from ETEC and V. cholerae in turn. These results highlight the versatile vaccine applications offered by OMVs via expression of heterologous antigens in the donor bacterium.
Budding of the bacterial surface results in the formation and secretion of outer membrane vesicles, which is a conserved phenomenon observed in Gram-negative bacteria. Recent studies highlight that these spherical shaped facsimiles of the donor bacterium's surface with enclosed periplasmic content may serve multiple purposes for their host bacterium. This includes inter- and intra-species cell-cell communication, effector delivery to target cells and bacterial adaptation strategies. This review provides a concise overview on potential medical applications to exploit outer membrane vesicles for therapeutic approaches. Due to the fact that outer membrane vesicles resemble the surface of their donor cells they represent interesting non-living candidates for vaccine development. Furthermore, bacterial donor species can be genetically engineered to display various proteins and glycans of interest on the outer membrane vesicle surface or in their lumen. Outer membrane vesicles also possess valuable bioreactor features as they have the natural capacity to protect, stabilize and enhance the activity of luminal enzymes. Along these features outer membrane vesicles might not only be suitable for biotechnological applications, but may also enable cell-specific delivery of designed therapeutics as they are efficiently internalized by non-professional phagocytes. Finally, outer membrane vesicles are potent modulators of our immune system with pro- and anti-inflammatory properties. A deeper understanding of immunoregulatory effects provoked by different outer membrane vesicles is the basis for their possible future applications ranging from inflammation and immune response modulation to anti-cancer therapy.
The release of membrane vesicles from the bacterial cell surface is highly conserved among most bacterial species, including outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) from Gram-negative bacteria as well as vesicles liberated from the cytoplasmic membrane of Gram-positive bacteria. It is becoming increasingly evident that these multifactorial spheres, carrying membranous, periplasmic, and even cytosolic content, contribute to intra- and interspecies communication.
Investigation of bacterial gene regulation upon environmental changes is still a challenging task. For example, Vibrio cholerae, a pathogen of the human gastrointestinal tract, faces diverse transient conditions in different compartments upon oral ingestion. Genetic reporter systems have been demonstrated to be extremely powerful tools to unravel gene regulation events in complex conditions, but so far focused mainly on gene induction. Herein, we describe the TetR-controlled recombinationbased in vivo expression technology TRIVET, which allows detection of gene silencing events. TRIVET resembles a modified variant of the in vivo expression technology (IVET) as well as recombinationbased in vivo expression technology (RIVET), which were used to identify conditional gene induction in several bacteria during host colonization. Like its predecessors, TRIVET is a single cell based reporter system, which allows the analysis of bacterial gene repression in a spatiotemporal manner via phenotypical changes in the resistance profile. Briefly, a promoterless tetR (encoding the transcriptional repressor TetR) can be integrated randomly into the bacterial genome via transposon mutagenesis or site-specific downstream of a promoter of interest via homologous recombination. Reduction of transcriptional expression of TetR results in a de-repression of the TetR-controlled resolvase TnpR, which in turn leads to excision of an antibiotic resistance cassette (also known as res-cassette) and altered resistance profile observable via streaking on ampicillin and kanamycin plates. This alteration can then be quantified as the ratio between resistant and non-resistant isolates. Furthermore, the newly introduced second reporter gene, a promoterless phoA (encoding the alkaline phosphatase PhoA) offers an additional validation step of the results via an independent colorimetric assay to measure enzyme activity. The protocol presented herein also offers an approach to identify the gene locus in case of the random screen for gene repression as well as a quantification of the conditional repression of a gene of interest. Although the current protocol is established for gene repression during host colonization, it can likely be adapted to study gene silencing under various conditions faced by a bacterium.
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