Abstract
The Escherichia coli hemolysin (HlyA) is a pore-forming exotoxin associated with severe complications of human urinary tract infections. HlyA is the prototype of the repeats-in-toxin (RTX) family, which includes LtxA from Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans, a periodontal pathogen. The existence and requirement for a host cell receptor for these toxins are controversial. We performed an unbiased forward genetic selection in a mutant library of human monocytic cells, U-937, for host factors involved in HlyA cytotoxicity. The top candidate was the β2 integrin β subunit. Δβ2 cell lines are approximately 100-fold more resistant than wild-type U-937 cells to HlyA, but remain sensitive to HlyA at high concentrations. Similarly, Δβ2 cells are more resistant than wild-type U-937 cells to LtxA, as Δβ2 cells remain LtxA resistant even at >1,000-fold-higher concentrations of the toxin. Loss of any single β2 integrin α subunit, or even all four α subunits together, does not confer resistance to HlyA. HlyA and LtxA bind to the β2 subunit, but not to αL, αM, or αX in far-Western blots. Genetic complementation of Δβ2 cells with either β2 or β2 with a cytoplasmic tail deletion restores HlyA and LtxA sensitivity, suggesting that β2 integrin signaling is not required for cytotoxicity. Finally, β2 mutations do not alter sensitivity to unrelated pore-forming toxins, as wild-type or Δβ2 cells are equally sensitive to Staphylococcus aureus α-toxin and Proteus mirabilis HpmA. Our studies show two RTX toxins use the β2 integrin β subunit alone to facilitate cytotoxicity, but downstream integrin signaling is dispensable.IMPORTANCE Urinary tract infections are one of the most common bacterial infections worldwide. Uropathogenic Escherichia coli strains are responsible for more than 80% of community-acquired urinary tract infections. Although we have known for nearly a century that severe infections stemming from urinary tract infections, including kidney or bloodstream infections are associated with expression of a toxin, hemolysin, from uropathogenic Escherichia coli, how hemolysin functions to enhance virulence is unknown. Our research defines the interaction of hemolysin with the β2 integrin, a human white cell adhesion molecule, as a potential therapeutic target during urinary tract infections. The E. coli hemolysin is the prototype for a toxin family (RTX family) produced by a wide array of human and animal pathogens. Our work extends to the identification and characterization of the receptor for an additional member of the RTX family, suggesting that this interaction may be broadly conserved throughout the RTX toxin family.
Highlights
The Escherichia coli hemolysin (HlyA) is a pore-forming exotoxin associated with severe complications of human urinary tract infections
This library contains over 120,000 single guide RNAs, with 6 sgRNAs targeting each of 19,050 genes and 4 sgRNAs targeting each of 1,864 microRNAs [24]
Four of the six sgRNAs targeting the integrin subunit 2 gene (ITGB2) were positively selected in all HlyA-treated libraries, comprising up to 84% of the sequence reads from one of the populations and generating the most robust hit by several orders of magnitude in our selection (Fig. 1B; see Fig. S2 in the supplemental material)
Summary
The Escherichia coli hemolysin (HlyA) is a pore-forming exotoxin associated with severe complications of human urinary tract infections. Uropathogenic Escherichia coli strains are responsible for more than 80% of community-acquired urinary tract infections. We have known for nearly a century that severe infections stemming from urinary tract infections, including kidney or bloodstream infections are associated with expression of a toxin, hemolysin, from uropathogenic Escherichia coli, how hemolysin functions to enhance virulence is unknown. Uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC) strains are the causative agent of Ͼ80% of community-acquired urinary tract infections (UTIs), which average 8 to 9 million cases annually in the United States, and. Valeva et al contend that the expression of ␣L2 enhances sensitivity of cells to all pore-forming toxins, suggesting that HlyA activity is not receptor dependent [15]. The interaction of HlyA with 2 integrins has been described in several reports, the significance and reproducibility of this across the field have remained debatable and the assessment of HlyA interaction with each member of the 2 integrin family incomplete
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