Abstract

Yersinia are causative agents in human diseases ranging from gastrointestinal syndromes to Bubonic Plague. There is increasing risk of misuse of infectious agents, such as Yersinia pestis, as weapons of terror as well as instruments of warfare for mass destruction. YopH is an essential virulence factor whose protein-tyrosine phosphatase (PTP) activity is required for Yersinia pathogenicity. Consequently, there is considerable interest in developing potent and selective YopH inhibitors as novel anti-plague agents. We have screened a library of 720 structurally diverse commercially available carboxylic acids and identified 26 YopH inhibitors with IC50 values below 100 mum. The most potent and specific YopH inhibitor is aurintricarboxylic acid (ATA), which exhibits a Ki value of 5 nm for YopH and displays 6-120-fold selectivity in favor of YopH against a panel of mammalian PTPs. To determine whether ATA can block the activity of YopH in a cellular context, we have examined the effect of ATA on T-cell signaling in human Jurkat cells transfected with YopH. We show that YopH severely decreases the T-cell receptor-induced cellular tyrosine phosphorylation, ERK1/2 activity, and interleukin-2 transcriptional activity. We demonstrate that ATA can effectively block the inhibitory activity of YopH and restore normal T-cell function. These results provide a proof-of-concept for the hypothesis that small molecule inhibitors that selectively target YopH may be therapeutically useful. In addition, it is expected that potent and selective YopH inhibitors, such as ATA, should be useful reagents to delineate YopH's cellular targets in plague and other pathogenic conditions caused by Yersinia infection.

Highlights

  • Yersinia are causative agents in human diseases ranging from gastrointestinal syndromes to Bubonic Plague

  • To determine whether aurintricarboxylic acid (ATA) can block the activity of YopH in a cellular context, we have examined the effect of ATA on T-cell signaling in human Jurkat cells transfected with YopH

  • Because the YopH phosphatase activity is essential for virulence in the Yersinia pathogen, small molecule inhibitors of YopH may constitute a novel family of anti-plague agents

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Summary

Introduction

Yersinia are causative agents in human diseases ranging from gastrointestinal syndromes to Bubonic Plague. YopH is an essential virulence factor whose protein-tyrosine phosphatase (PTP) activity is required for Yersinia pathogenicity. Because bacteria in general do not contain tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins [19], the requirement of the YopH PTP activity for Yersinia pathogenicity suggests that it mediates a novel mechanism of bacterial pathogenesis. This paper is available on line at http://www.jbc.org include p130cas, focal adhesion kinase p125FAK, and paxillin, all tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins found in the focal adhesion complexes [24, 25] These findings are consistent with the observations that YopH activity causes the disassembly of focal adhesion, which impairs the entry of the bacteria into HeLa cells or their phagocytosis by macrophages and neutrophils (24 –27). The YopH-mediated dephosphorylation of focal adhesion proteins may be important for the ability of Yersinia to escape the host innate immune responses

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