Abstract

The food-borne pathogen Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium invades mammalian epithelial cells. This multistep process comprises bacterial binding to the host cell, activation of the Salmonella type three secretion system 1 (T1), injection of effector proteins, triggering of host cell actin rearrangements, and S. Typhimurium entry. While the latter steps are well understood, much less is known about the initial binding step. Earlier work had implicated adhesins (but not T1) or T1 (but not other adhesins). We have studied here the Salmonella virulence factors mediating S. Typhimurium binding to HeLa cells. Using an automated microscopy assay and isogenic S. Typhimurium mutants, we analyzed the role of T1 and of several known adhesins (Fim, Pef, Lpf, Agf, and Shd) in host cell binding. In wild-type S. Typhimurium, host cell binding was mostly attributable to T1. However, in the absence of T1, Fim (but not Pef, Lpf, Agf, and Shd) also mediated HeLa cell binding. Furthermore, in the absence of T1 and type I fimbriae (Fim), we still observed residual binding, pointing toward at least one additional, unidentified binding mechanism. Dissociation experiments established that T1-mediated binding was irreversible ("docking"), while Fim-mediated binding was reversible ("reversible adhesion"). Finally, we show that noninvasive bacteria docking via T1 or adhering via Fim can efficiently invade HeLa cells, if actin rearrangements are triggered in trans by a wild-type S. Typhimurium helper strain. Our data show that binding to HeLa cells is mediated by at least two different mechanisms and that both can lead to invasion if actin rearrangements are triggered.

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