Abstract

Pathogenic Yersinia bacteria cause a range of human diseases. To modulate and evade host immune systems, these yersiniae inject effector proteins into host macrophages. One such protein, the serine/threonine kinase YopO (YpkA in Yersinia pestis), uses monomeric actin as bait to recruit and phosphorylate host actin polymerization-regulating proteins, including the actin-severing protein gelsolin, to disrupt actin filaments and thus impair phagocytosis. However, the YopO phosphorylation sites on gelsolin and the consequences of YopO-mediated phosphorylation on actin remodeling have yet to be established. Here we determined the effects of YopO-mediated phosphorylation on gelsolin and identified its phosphorylation sites by mass spectrometry. YopO phosphorylated gelsolin in the linker region between gelsolin homology domains G3 and G4, which, in the absence of calcium, are compacted but adopt an open conformation in the presence of calcium, enabling actin binding and severing. Using phosphomimetic and phosphodeletion gelsolin mutants, we found that YopO-mediated phosphorylation partially mimics calcium-dependent activation of gelsolin, potentially contributing to a reduction in filamentous actin and altered actin dynamics in phagocytic cells. In summary, this work represents the first report of the functional outcome of serine/threonine phosphorylation in gelsolin regulation and provides critical insight into how YopO disrupts normal gelsolin function to alter host actin dynamics and thus cripple phagocytosis.

Highlights

  • Pathogenic Yersinia bacteria cause a range of human diseases

  • Gelsolin is involved in Fc-␥ receptor (Fc␥R)6 and integrin-mediated phagocytosis and is enriched around the phagosome, in IgG-mediated phagocytosis [6], and as such gelsolin-null neutrophils are impaired in Fc␥R-mediated phagocytosis, whereas gelsolin-null fibroblasts exhibit defective binding and phagocytosis [6]

  • A subset of actin filament-regulating proteins, those that are sufficiently elongated to span from the actinbinding site to the kinase catalytic cleft and can present suitable residues, are phosphorylated by YopO, including gelsolin, mDia1, VASP, EVL, and WASP [16, 25]

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Summary

Introduction

To modulate and evade host immune systems, these yersiniae inject effector proteins into host macrophages One such protein, the serine/threonine kinase YopO (YpkA in Yersinia pestis), uses monomeric actin as bait to recruit and phosphorylate host actin polymerization-regulating proteins, including the actin-severing protein gelsolin, to disrupt actin filaments and impair phagocytosis. Gelsolin exists in the blood plasma as an 83-kDa protein, forming part of the extracellular actin-scavenging system It is present as an 81-kDa protein in a wide range of cell types [1]. It is implicated in various cellular processes, including cell motility, phagocytosis, signaling, apoptosis, cancer, and platelet activation, and it has roles in a number of diseases [2].

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