Abstract

Enteric bacterial pathogens cause food borne disease, which constitutes an enormous economic and health burden. Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) causes a severe bloody diarrhea following transmission to humans through various means, including contaminated beef and vegetable products, water, or through contact with animals. EHEC also causes a potentially fatal kidney disease (hemolytic uremic syndrome) for which there is no effective treatment or prophylaxis. EHEC and other enteric pathogens (e.g., enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC), Salmonella, Shigella, Yersinia) utilize a type III secretion system (T3SS) to inject virulence proteins (effectors) into host cells. While it is known that T3SS effectors subvert host cell function to promote diarrheal disease and bacterial transmission, in many cases, the mechanisms by which these effectors bind to host proteins and disrupt the normal function of intestinal epithelial cells have not been completely characterized. In this study, we present evidence that the E. coli O157:H7 nleH1 and nleH2 genes encode T3SS effectors that bind to the human ribosomal protein S3 (RPS3), a subunit of nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells (NF-κB) transcriptional complexes. NleH1 and NleH2 co-localized with RPS3 in the cytoplasm, but not in cell nuclei. The N-terminal region of both NleH1 and NleH2 was required for binding to the N-terminus of RPS3. NleH1 and NleH2 are autophosphorylated Ser/Thr protein kinases, but their binding to RPS3 is independent of kinase activity. NleH1, but not NleH2, reduced the nuclear abundance of RPS3 without altering the p50 or p65 NF-κB subunits or affecting the phosphorylation state or abundance of the inhibitory NF-κB chaperone IκBα NleH1 repressed the transcription of a RPS3/NF-κB-dependent reporter plasmid, but did not inhibit the transcription of RPS3-independent reporters. In contrast, NleH2 stimulated RPS3-dependent transcription, as well as an AP-1-dependent reporter. We identified a region of NleH1 (N40-K45) that is at least partially responsible for the inhibitory activity of NleH1 toward RPS3. Deleting nleH1 from E. coli O157:H7 produced a hypervirulent phenotype in a gnotobiotic piglet model of Shiga toxin-producing E. coli infection. We suggest that NleH may disrupt host innate immune responses by binding to a cofactor of host transcriptional complexes.

Highlights

  • Diarrheal disease caused by enteric bacteria is an important endemic health threat and a major source of food borne disease [1]

  • The enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC) T3SS and several effectors are encoded on a pathogenicity island termed the ‘locus of enterocyte effacement’ (LEE; [5]), whose genomic structure, function, and regulation are well conserved among the characterized A/E pathogens (i.e. EHEC, Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC), Citrobacter rodentium)

  • We have discovered that Escherichia coli O157:H7, an important cause of hemorrhagic colitis, injects into mammalian cells an effector protein termed NleH1, which inhibits NF-kBdependent transcription through a novel mechanism

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Summary

Introduction

Diarrheal disease caused by enteric bacteria is an important endemic health threat and a major source of food borne disease [1]. Over 76 million cases of diarrheal disease and 5,000 deaths result from food borne illness in the United States annually (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention). EHEC virulence proteins (effectors) are translocated directly into intestinal epithelial cells through a type III secretion system (T3SS; [4]). The EHEC T3SS and several effectors are encoded on a pathogenicity island termed the ‘locus of enterocyte effacement’ (LEE; [5]), whose genomic structure, function, and regulation are well conserved among the characterized A/E pathogens (i.e. EHEC, EPEC, Citrobacter rodentium). Over 20 other secreted proteins (non-LEE-encoded effectors; Nles) encoded by genes in multiple pathogenicity islands

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