Abstract

Helicobacter pylori secretes a cytotoxin (VacA) that induces the formation of large vacuoles originating from late endocytic vesicles in sensitive mammalian cells. Although evidence is accumulating that VacA is an A-B toxin, distinct A and B fragments have not been identified. To localize the putative catalytic A-fragment, we transfected HeLa cells with plasmids encoding truncated forms of VacA fused to green fluorescence protein. By analyzing truncated VacA fragments for intracellular vacuolating activity, we reduced the minimal functional domain to the amino-terminal 422 residues of VacA, which is less than one-half of the full-length protein (953 amino acids). VacA is frequently isolated as a proteolytically nicked protein of two fragments that remain noncovalently associated and retain vacuolating activity. Neither the amino-terminal 311 residue fragment (p33) nor the carboxyl-terminal 642 residue fragment (p70) of proteolytically nicked VacA are able to induce cellular vacuolation by themselves. However, co-transfection of HeLa cells with separate plasmids expressing both p33 and p70 resulted in vacuolated cells. Further analysis revealed that a minimal fragment comprising just residues 312-478 functionally complemented p33. Collectively, our results suggest a novel molecular architecture for VacA, with cytosolic localization of both fragments of nicked toxin required to mediate intracellular vacuolating activity.

Highlights

  • vacuolating cytotoxin (VacA) is synthesized as a 140-kDa protein [5, 13, 15, 22]

  • Was mapped by transfecting HeLa cells with pET-20b harboring genes encoding either the mature VacA peptide cloned from the 60190 toxigenic strain of H. pylori or truncated fragments of VacA fused to green fluorescence protein (GFP)

  • HeLa cells were first infected with recombinant vaccinia virus bearing the gene for phage T7 RNA polymerase followed by transfection with pET-20b encoding VacA fragments fused to GFP [24, 39]

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Summary

Introduction

VacA is synthesized as a 140-kDa protein [5, 13, 15, 22]. The carboxyl-terminal domain facilitates secretion of the 103-kDa mature protein into the extracellular medium [5, 13, 15, 22]. These investigations revealed that a discrete VacA fragment can function from the host cell cytosol to induce vacuoles with properties similar to those caused by full-length toxin added externally to cells. Was mapped by transfecting HeLa cells with pET-20b harboring genes encoding either the mature VacA peptide (residues 1–953) cloned from the 60190 toxigenic strain of H. pylori or truncated fragments of VacA fused to GFP.

Results
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