Abstract

The causative agent of Legionnaires' pneumonia, Legionella pneumophila, colonizes diverse environmental niches, including biofilms, plant material, and protozoa. In these habitats, myo-inositol hexakisphosphate (phytate) is prevalent and used as a phosphate storage compound or as a siderophore. L. pneumophila replicates in protozoa and mammalian phagocytes within a unique "Legionella-containing vacuole." The bacteria govern host cell interactions through the Icm/Dot type IV secretion system (T4SS) and ∼300 different "effector" proteins. Here we characterize a hitherto unrecognized Icm/Dot substrate, LppA, as a phytate phosphatase (phytase). Phytase activity of recombinant LppA required catalytically essential cysteine (Cys(231)) and arginine (Arg(237)) residues. The structure of LppA at 1.4 Å resolution revealed a mainly α-helical globular protein stabilized by four antiparallel β-sheets that binds two phosphate moieties. The phosphates localize to a P-loop active site characteristic of dual specificity phosphatases or to a non-catalytic site, respectively. Phytate reversibly abolished growth of L. pneumophila in broth, and growth inhibition was relieved by overproduction of LppA or by metal ion titration. L. pneumophila lacking lppA replicated less efficiently in phytate-loaded Acanthamoeba castellanii or Dictyostelium discoideum, and the intracellular growth defect was complemented by the phytase gene. These findings identify the chelator phytate as an intracellular bacteriostatic component of cell-autonomous host immunity and reveal a T4SS-translocated L. pneumophila phytase that counteracts intracellular bacterial growth restriction by phytate. Thus, bacterial phytases might represent therapeutic targets to combat intracellular pathogens.

Highlights

  • Legionella governs pathogen-host interactions by translocating ϳ300 “effector” proteins through a type IV secretion system

  • We identified the chelator phytate as an intracellular bacteriostatic compound, and we provide evidence that the T4SS-translocated L. pneumophila phytase LppA counteracts bacterial growth restriction by phytate by hydrolyzing and inactivating the chelator

  • The bacteria possess a number of iron uptake systems, including the siderophore legiobactin and the ferrous iron transmembrane transporter FeoB [54]

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Summary

Background

Legionella governs pathogen-host interactions by translocating ϳ300 “effector” proteins through a type IV secretion system. The causative agent of Legionnaires’ pneumonia, Legionella pneumophila, colonizes diverse environmental niches, including biofilms, plant material, and protozoa In these habitats, myo-inositol hexakisphosphate (phytate) is prevalent and used as a phosphate storage compound or as a siderophore. These findings identify the chelator phytate as an intracellular bacteriostatic component of cell-autonomous host immunity and reveal a T4SS-translocated L. pneumophila phytase that counteracts intracellular bacterial growth restriction by phytate. In free living amoebae and mammalian phagocytes, Legionella pneumophila replicates within a “Legionella-containing vacuole” (LCV), employing the Icm/ Dot type IV secretion system (T4SS) and ϳ300 different “effector” proteins [5,6,7]. The phytase, termed LppA, hydrolyzes phytate and PIs in vitro and is translocated by the Icm/Dot T4SS into host cells, where it counteracts intracellular bacterial growth restriction by the chelator phytate

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