Abstract

The B subunit pentamer verotoxin (VT aka Shiga toxin-Stx) binding to its cellular glycosphingolipid (GSL) receptor, globotriaosyl ceramide (Gb3) mediates internalization and the subsequent receptor mediated retrograde intracellular traffic of the AB5 subunit holotoxin to the endoplasmic reticulum. Subunit separation and cytosolic A subunit transit via the ER retrotranslocon as a misfolded protein mimic, then inhibits protein synthesis to kill cells, which can cause hemolytic uremic syndrome clinically. This represents one of the most studied systems of prokaryotic hijacking of eukaryotic biology. Similarly, the interaction of cholera AB5 toxin with its GSL receptor, GM1 ganglioside, is the key component of the gastrointestinal pathogenesis of cholera and follows the same retrograde transport pathway for A subunit cytosol access. Although both VT and CT are the cause of major pathology worldwide, the toxin–receptor interaction is itself being manipulated to generate new approaches to control, rather than cause, disease. This arena comprises two areas: anti neoplasia, and protein misfolding diseases. CT/CTB subunit immunomodulatory function and anti-cancer toxin immunoconjugates will not be considered here. In the verotoxin case, it is clear that Gb3 (and VT targeting) is upregulated in many human cancers and that there is a relationship between GSL expression and cancer drug resistance. While both verotoxin and cholera toxin similarly hijack the intracellular ERAD quality control system of nascent protein folding, the more widespread cell expression of GM1 makes cholera the toxin of choice as the means to more widely utilise ERAD targeting to ameliorate genetic diseases of protein misfolding. Gb3 is primarily expressed in human renal tissue. Glomerular endothelial cells are the primary VT target but Gb3 is expressed in other endothelial beds, notably brain endothelial cells which can mediate the encephalopathy primarily associated with VT2-producing E. coli infection. The Gb3 levels can be regulated by cytokines released during EHEC infection, which complicate pathogenesis. Significantly Gb3 is upregulated in the neovasculature of many tumours, irrespective of tumour Gb3 status. Gb3 is markedly increased in pancreatic, ovarian, breast, testicular, renal, astrocytic, gastric, colorectal, cervical, sarcoma and meningeal cancer relative to the normal tissue. VT has been shown to be effective in mouse xenograft models of renal, astrocytoma, ovarian, colorectal, meningioma, and breast cancer. These studies are herein reviewed. Both CT and VT (and several other bacterial toxins) access the cell cytosol via cell surface ->ER transport. Once in the ER they interface with the protein folding homeostatic quality control pathway of the cell -ERAD, (ER associated degradation), which ensures that only correctly folded nascent proteins are allowed to progress to their cellular destinations. Misfolded proteins are translocated through the ER membrane and degraded by cytosolic proteosome. VT and CT A subunits have a C terminal misfolded protein mimic sequence to hijack this transporter to enter the cytosol. This interface between exogenous toxin and genetically encoded endogenous mutant misfolded proteins, provides a new therapeutic basis for the treatment of such genetic diseases, e.g., Cystic fibrosis, Gaucher disease, Krabbe disease, Fabry disease, Tay-Sachs disease and many more. Studies showing the efficacy of this approach in animal models of such diseases are presented.

Highlights

  • The Verocytotoxin (VT, Shiga toxin: Stx) was first shown to be the cause of the hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) in 1985 by Karmali [1]

  • VT is a family of A-B5 subunit E. coli toxins [3] in which VT1 and VT2 are primarily associated with HUS [4,5]

  • Due to the concern that VT holotoxin is central in the etiology of HUS, several antiproliferative drugs have been conjugated to the nontoxic VT B subunit to increase tumour selective cytotoxicity [92,133,134,135]

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Summary

Introduction

The Verocytotoxin (VT, Shiga toxin: Stx) was first shown to be the cause of the hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) in 1985 by Karmali [1]. Non-raft Gb3 bound VT is, in contrast, internalized and transported to lysosomes [24] This sorting corresponds with the presence of Gb3 in rafts in human renal glomerular endothelial cells, the site of primary pathology [25], but not in renal tubular epithelial cells [13] (which are affected only in later HUS stages [13]). In addition to inhibition of protein synthesis, VTs have been shown to induce apoptosis [54,55,56,57,58,59,60,61,62] This can be due to the pentameric B subunit binding Gb3 [63,64,65], a property shared by anti-Gb3 [66], or require the intact holotoxin [62,67]. VT1 induces apoptosis in many human cancer cell lines [68,69,70,71,72], but VT-induced ER stress can activate survival pathways [73]

Gb3 Is a Cancer Marker
Is This the Limit of Gb3 Detection?
Cancer Stem Cells
B Subunit Conjugates
Potency
Efficacy
As an Immunogen Carrier
Effects on Lymphoid Cells
Verotoxin A Subunit Redirection of Intracellular Traffic
F508delta CFTR
N370S Glucocerebrosidase
Cystic Fibrosis Animal Model
Gaucher Disease Animal Model
Findings
Future Studies
Full Text
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