Abstract

Virulent C. difficile toxins TcdA and TcdB invade host intestinal epithelia by endocytosis and use the acidic environment of intracellular vesicles for further processing and activation. We investigated the role of ClC-5, a chloride/proton exchanger expressed in the endosomes of gastrointestinal epithelial cells, in the activation and processing of C. difficile toxins. Enhanced intoxication by TcdA and TcdB was observed in cells expressing ClC-5 but not ClC-4, another chloride/proton exchanger with similar function but different localization. In accordance with the established physiological function of ClC-5, its expression lowered the endosomal pH in HEK293T cells by approximately 0.6 units and enhanced approximately 5-fold the internalization of TcdA. In colon HT29 cells, 34% of internalized TcdA localized to ClC-5-containing vesicles defined by colocalization with Rab5, Rab4a, and Rab7 as early and early-to-late of endosomes but not as Rab11-containing recycling endosomes. Impairing the cellular uptake of TcdA by deleting the toxin CROPs domain did not abolish the effects of ClC-5. In addition, the transport-incompetent mutant ClC-5 E268Q similarly enhanced both endosomal acidification and intoxication by TcdA but facilitated the internalization of the toxin to a lower extent. These data suggest that ClC-5 enhances the cytotoxic action of C. difficile toxins by accelerating the acidification and maturation of vesicles of the early and early-to-late endosomal system. The dispensable role of electrogenic ion transport suggests that the voltage-dependent nonlinear capacitances of mammalian CLC transporters serve important physiological functions. Our data shed light on the intersection between the endocytotic cascade of host epithelial cells and the internalization pathway of the large virulence C. difficile toxins. Identifying ClC-5 as a potential specific host ion transporter hijacked by toxins produced by pathogenic bacteria widens the horizon of possibilities for novel therapies of life-threatening gastrointestinal infections.

Highlights

  • The spore-producing gram-positive bacterium Clostridium difficile (C. difficile) is one of the leading causes of healthcarerelated infections

  • In light of the permissive role of vesicular acidity for the cytopathic action of bacterial toxins, we set out to investigate the potential involvement of the human Cl−/H+ exchanger ClC-5 in the processing and activation of C. difficile TcdA and TcdB

  • We investigated the effects of a truncated TcdA peptide in which the domain containing the so-called combined repetitive oligopeptides (CROPs) is removed (Papatheodorou et al, 2010; Olling et al, 2011; Gerhard et al, 2013)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The spore-producing gram-positive bacterium Clostridium difficile (C. difficile) is one of the leading causes of healthcarerelated infections. In light of the permissive role of vesicular acidity for the cytopathic action of bacterial toxins, we set out to investigate the potential involvement of the human Cl−/H+ exchanger ClC-5 in the processing and activation of C. difficile TcdA and TcdB. (Sullivan et al, 2009; Alex et al, 2010) These data support the notion that human ClC-5 might be involved in the development of C. difficile-induced cytotoxicity and the pathophysiology of CDI To test this hypothesis, we expressed human ClC-5 in HEK293 and colon HT29 cells and elucidated the effects of this manipulation on the endocytosis and cellular effects of TcdA and TcdB

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