Pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) detect conserved microbial structures generally absent from eukaryotes. Bacterial pathogens commonly utilize pore-forming toxins or specialized secretion systems to deliver virulence factors that promote bacterial replication by modulating host cell physiology. Detection of these secretion systems or toxins by nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain leucine-rich-repeat proteins (NLRs) triggers the assembly of multiprotein complexes, termed inflammasomes, necessary for caspase-1 activation. Here we demonstrate that caspase-1 activation in response to the Yersinia type III secretion system (T3SS) requires the adapter ASC, and involves both NLRP3 and NLRC4 inflammasomes. We further identify a Yersinia type III secreted effector protein, YopK, which prevents inflammasome activation by preventing cellular recognition of the T3SS. Inflammasome-mediated sensing of the T3SS promotes bacterial clearance from infected tissues in vivo. These data demonstrate that a class of bacterial proteins interferes with cellular recognition of bacterial secretion systems, which contributes to bacterial survival within host tissues.
Iron is an essential nutrient not freely available to microorganisms infecting mammals. To overcome iron deficiency, bacteria have evolved various strategies including the synthesis and secretion of high-affinity iron chelators known as siderophores. The siderophores produced and secreted by Mycobacterium tuberculosis, exomycobactins, compete for iron with host iron-binding proteins and, together with the iron-regulated ABC transporter IrtAB, are required for the survival of M. tuberculosis in iron deficient conditions and for normal replication in macrophages and in mice. This study further characterizes the role of IrtAB in M. tuberculosis iron acquisition. Our results demonstrate a role for IrtAB in iron import and show that the amino terminus domain of IrtA is a flavin-adenine dinucleotide-binding domain essential for iron acquisition. These results suggest a model in which the amino terminus of IrtA functions to couple iron transport and assimilation.Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative agent of human tuberculosis, like most organisms, requires iron to sustain essential cellular functions. Due to the poor aqueous solubility of the ferric ion (Fe 3ϩ ) in aerobic and neutral pH conditions, free ferric iron is not found in the mammalian host but is bound to iron-binding proteins such as transferrin, lactoferrin, and ferritin (30). A common mechanism by which bacteria acquire iron is the synthesis and secretion of siderophores (high-affinity iron chelators) that can solubilize iron in the environment or remove it from iron-binding proteins of the mammalian host. Fe 3ϩ -siderophore complexes are recognized by specific surface receptors and translocated through the plasma membrane by ABC-type transporters, using the energy generated by ATP hydrolysis (13). Dissociation of iron from the incorporated siderophore complex can occur via cleavage of the siderophore or by the action of a ferric reductase (13). Reduction of Fe 3ϩ results in a weaker binding of Fe 2ϩ to the siderophore, allowing release of iron that can then be utilized (21).To overcome iron limitation, M. tuberculosis synthesizes siderophores named mycobactin and exomycobactin. Mycobactin is very hydrophobic and remains cell associated, whereas exomycobactin (ExMB, also known as carboxymycobactin) is more hydrophilic and is secreted to the medium (8, 16). Fe 3ϩ -ExMB complexes can deliver iron to the cell by transfer of iron to mycobactin (7) or by a pathway that is mycobactin independent (17). Previously, we showed that inactivation of M. tuberculosis irtA (Rv1348) or irtB (Rv1349) genes, which encode membrane proteins of the ABC transporter family (2), results in decreased ability of M. tuberculosis to replicate in low-iron medium and to utilize Fe 3ϩ -ExMb as the sole iron source. Because IrtA and IrtB each encode a membrane protein with one permease domain fused to an ATPase domain, and irtA and irtB are organized in an operon, we postulated that these two proteins associate to form one ABC transporter necessary for iron acquisition in vitro and...
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tb) infection is initiated by the few bacilli inhaled into the alveolus. Studies in lungs of aerosol-infected mice provided evidence for extensive replication of M. tb in non-migrating, non-antigen-presenting cells in the alveoli during the first 2–3 weeks post-infection. Alveoli are lined by type II and type I alveolar epithelial cells (AEC) which outnumber alveolar macrophages by several hundred-fold. M. tb DNA and viable M. tb have been demonstrated in AEC and other non-macrophage cells of the kidney, liver, and spleen in autopsied tissues from latently-infected subjects from TB-endemic regions indicating systemic bacterial dissemination during primary infection. M. tb have also been demonstrated to replicate rapidly in A549 cells (type II AEC line) and acquire increased invasiveness for endothelial cells. Together, these results suggest that AEC could provide an important niche for bacterial expansion and development of a phenotype that promotes dissemination during primary infection. In the current studies, we have compared the transcriptional profile of M. tb replicating intracellularly in A549 cells to that of M. tb replicating in laboratory broth, by microarray analysis. Genes significantly upregulated during intracellular residence were consistent with an active, replicative, metabolic, and aerobic state, as were genes for tryptophan synthesis and for increased virulence (ESAT-6, and ESAT-6-like genes, esxH, esxJ, esxK, esxP, and esxW). In contrast, significant downregulation of the DevR (DosR) regulon and several hypoxia-induced genes was observed. Stress response genes were either not differentially expressed or were downregulated with the exception of the heat shock response and those induced by low pH. The intra-type II AEC M. tb transcriptome strongly suggests that AEC could provide a safe haven in which M. tb can expand dramatically and disseminate from the lung prior to the elicitation of adaptive immune responses.
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