Abstract

Foodborne Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) infections of the small intestine cause diarrhea especially in children and are a major cause of childhood death in developing countries. EPEC infects the apical membrane of the epithelium of the small intestine by attaching, effacing the microvilli under the bacteria and then forming microcolonies on the cell surface. We first asked the question where on epithelial cells EPEC attaches and grows. Using models of polarized epithelial monolayers, we evaluated the sites of initial EPEC attachment to the apical membrane and found that EPEC preferentially attached over the cell-cell junctions and formed microcolonies preferentially where three cells come together at tricellular tight junctions. The ability of EPEC to adhere increased when host cell polarity was compromised yielding EPEC access to basolateral proteins. EPEC pedestals contain basolateral cytoskeletal proteins. Thus, we asked if attached EPEC causes reorganization the protein composition of the host cell plasma membrane at sites of microcolony formation. We found that EPEC microcolony growth at the apical membrane resulted in a local accumulation of basolateral plasma membrane proteins surrounding the microcolony. Basolateral marker protein aquaporin-3 localized to forming EPEC microcolonies. Components of the basolateral vesicle targeting machinery were re-routed. The Exocyst (Exo70) was recruited to individual EPEC as was the basolateral vesicle SNARE VAMP-3. Moreover, several Rab variants were also recruited to the infection site, and their dominant-negative equivalents were not. To quantitatively study the recruitment of basolateral proteins, we created a pulse of the temperature sensitive basolateral VSVG, VSVG3-SP-GFP, from the trans-Golgi Network. We found that after release from the TGN, significantly more VSVG3-SP-GFP accumulated at the site of microcolony growth than on equivalent membrane regions of uninfected cells. This suggests that trafficking of vesicles destined for the basolateral membrane are redirected to the apical site of microcolony growth. Thus, in addition to disrupting host cell fence function, local host cell plasma membrane protein composition is changed by altered protein trafficking and recruitment of basolateral proteins to the apical microcolony. This may aid EPEC attachment and subsequent microcolony growth.

Highlights

  • Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) is a food-borne pathogen which can cause diarrhea and is annually responsible for thousands of deaths among infants in developing countries [1]

  • Basolateral proteins have been identified at the apical membrane domain of infected cells [35], which could be caused by a loss of epithelial fence function

  • In the present study we showed that EPEC infection of Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells altered cell polarity and that this occured locally at the EPEC microcolony rather than throughout the apical plasma membrane

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Summary

Introduction

Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) is a food-borne pathogen which can cause diarrhea and is annually responsible for thousands of deaths among infants in developing countries [1]. EPEC is highly related to the most common strains of STEC (Shiga-toxigenic E. coli) which infect the host with similar mechanisms and deliver a systemic toxin that can lead to lifethreatening diseases including haemolytic uraemic syndrome [2, 3]. EPEC and STEC are not invasive bacteria, but rather attach to and replicate on the surface of epithelial cells of the small intestine. An important unanswered question is whether EPEC alters the epithelial surface at the site of attachment to better colonize this niche. EPEC triggers host cell changes including effacement of microvilli, mitochondria dysfunction [4, 5], inhibition of nutrient/water transporter function [6], modulation of inflammatory responses [7], inhibition of apoptosis [8], inhibition of phagocytosis [9, 10], and tight junction disruption [11, 12]

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