Abstract

Vibrio cholerae produces cholera toxin (CT), an AB5 protein toxin that is primarily responsible for the profuse watery diarrhea of cholera. CT is secreted into the extracellular milieu, but the toxin attacks its Gsα target within the cytosol of a host cell. Thus, CT must cross a cellular membrane barrier in order to function. This event only occurs after the toxin travels by retrograde vesicular transport from the cell surface to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). The catalytic A1 polypeptide then dissociates from the rest of the toxin and assumes an unfolded conformation that facilitates its transfer to the cytosol by a process involving the quality control system of ER-associated degradation. Productive intoxication is blocked by alterations to the vesicular transport of CT and/or the ER-to-cytosol translocation of CTA1. Various plant compounds have been reported to inhibit the cytopathic activity of CT, so in this work we evaluated the potential anti-CT properties of grape extract. Two grape extracts currently sold as nutritional supplements inhibited CT and Escherichia coli heat-labile toxin activity against cultured cells and intestinal loops. CT intoxication was blocked even when the extracts were added an hour after the initial toxin exposure. A specific subset of host-toxin interactions involving both the catalytic CTA1 subunit and the cell-binding CTB pentamer were affected. The extracts blocked toxin binding to the cell surface, prevented unfolding of the isolated CTA1 subunit, inhibited CTA1 translocation to the cytosol, and disrupted the catalytic activity of CTA1. Grape extract could thus potentially serve as a novel therapeutic to prevent or possibly treat cholera.

Highlights

  • Cholera toxin (CT), produced by Vibrio cholerae, is an AB5 toxin responsible for the profuse, life-threatening diarrhea of cholera [1,2,3]

  • Extracttreated cells were resistant to E. coli labile toxin (LT), another AB5-type toxin that is highly related to CT [1,2]: an overnight incubation with 100 ng/mL of LT and either grape extract generated no more than 8% of the cAMP response obtained from cells incubated with LT alone (n = 2)

  • The grape seed and grape pomace extracts used in this study are sold as nutritional supplements under the names MegaNatural Gold and MegaNatural GSKE, respectfully

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Summary

Introduction

Cholera toxin (CT), produced by Vibrio cholerae, is an AB5 toxin responsible for the profuse, life-threatening diarrhea of cholera [1,2,3]. This physiological response results from ADP-ribosylation of Gsa by the catalytic A1 subunit of CT (CTA1). CTA1 exploits ERAD for its ER-to-cytosol translocation [20,21], but the lack of lysine residues in the CTA1 polypeptide allows the translocated toxin to avoid ubiquitination and subsequent degradation by the 26S proteasome [17,22,23]. Cytosolic CTA1 regains an active conformation and attacks its Gsa target

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