#PAGE_PARAMS# #ADS_HEAD_SCRIPTS# #MICRODATA#

The Enteropathogenic (EPEC) Tir Effector Inhibits NF-κB Activity by Targeting TNFα Receptor-Associated Factors


Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) disease depends on the transfer of effector proteins into epithelia lining the human small intestine. EPEC E2348/69 has at least 20 effector genes of which six are located with the effector-delivery system genes on the Locus of Enterocyte Effacement (LEE) Pathogenicity Island. Our previous work implied that non-LEE-encoded (Nle) effectors possess functions that inhibit epithelial anti-microbial and inflammation-inducing responses by blocking NF-κB transcription factor activity. Indeed, screens by us and others have identified novel inhibitory mechanisms for NleC and NleH, with key co-operative functions for NleB1 and NleE1. Here, we demonstrate that the LEE-encoded Translocated-intimin receptor (Tir) effector has a potent and specific ability to inhibit NF-κB activation. Indeed, biochemical, imaging and immunoprecipitation studies reveal a novel inhibitory mechanism whereby Tir interaction with cytoplasm-located TNFα receptor-associated factor (TRAF) adaptor proteins induces their proteasomal-independent degradation. Infection studies support this Tir-TRAF relationship but reveal that Tir, like NleC and NleH, has a non-essential contribution in EPEC's NF-κB inhibitory capacity linked to Tir's activity being suppressed by undefined EPEC factors. Infections in a disease-relevant intestinal model confirm key NF-κB inhibitory roles for the NleB1/NleE1 effectors, with other studies providing insights on host targets. The work not only reveals a second Intimin-independent property for Tir and a novel EPEC effector-mediated NF-κB inhibitory mechanism but also lends itself to speculations on the evolution of EPEC's capacity to inhibit NF-κB function.


Published in the journal: . PLoS Pathog 7(12): e32767. doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1002414
Category: Research Article
doi: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1002414

Summary

Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) disease depends on the transfer of effector proteins into epithelia lining the human small intestine. EPEC E2348/69 has at least 20 effector genes of which six are located with the effector-delivery system genes on the Locus of Enterocyte Effacement (LEE) Pathogenicity Island. Our previous work implied that non-LEE-encoded (Nle) effectors possess functions that inhibit epithelial anti-microbial and inflammation-inducing responses by blocking NF-κB transcription factor activity. Indeed, screens by us and others have identified novel inhibitory mechanisms for NleC and NleH, with key co-operative functions for NleB1 and NleE1. Here, we demonstrate that the LEE-encoded Translocated-intimin receptor (Tir) effector has a potent and specific ability to inhibit NF-κB activation. Indeed, biochemical, imaging and immunoprecipitation studies reveal a novel inhibitory mechanism whereby Tir interaction with cytoplasm-located TNFα receptor-associated factor (TRAF) adaptor proteins induces their proteasomal-independent degradation. Infection studies support this Tir-TRAF relationship but reveal that Tir, like NleC and NleH, has a non-essential contribution in EPEC's NF-κB inhibitory capacity linked to Tir's activity being suppressed by undefined EPEC factors. Infections in a disease-relevant intestinal model confirm key NF-κB inhibitory roles for the NleB1/NleE1 effectors, with other studies providing insights on host targets. The work not only reveals a second Intimin-independent property for Tir and a novel EPEC effector-mediated NF-κB inhibitory mechanism but also lends itself to speculations on the evolution of EPEC's capacity to inhibit NF-κB function.

Introduction

The EPEC disease process depends on a protein delivery system, encoded by the Locus of Enterocyte Effacement (LEE) Pathogenicity Island, that transfers effector proteins directly into the cytoplasm of infected epithelia [1][3]. This delivery apparatus is composed of a Type Three Secretion System (T3SS) and a filamentous extension - formed by the EPEC secreted/signalling protein A (EspA) tipped by EspB/EspD to form a pore in the host plasma membrane - generating a conduit for transferring effectors into host cells [1], [3]. The LEE region also encodes other factors, including the bacterial Intimin surface protein and six effectors: Translocated-Intimin receptor (Tir), Mitochondrial-associated protein (Map), EspF, EspG, EspH and EspZ (with EspB also exhibiting effector functions) [1], [3]. Prototypic EPEC (E2348/69) has at least fourteen additional non-LEE-encoded (Nle or Esp nomenclature) effector genes distributed on six horizontally-acquired mobile genetic elements [3], [4].

The EPEC disease process is characterised by a number of histo-pathological events including (i) initial non-intimate attachment to epithelial cells, (ii) bacteria sinking into the microvillus surface, (iii) intimate interaction with the host plasma membrane, (iv) nucleation of actin beneath intimately-adherent bacteria and (v) extensive loss/effacement of microvilli [1][3]. Studies with the Caco2 small intestinal model have provided insights on these events and revealed a plausible mechanism to explain the rapid onset of EPEC-induced watery diarrhoea [5]. Moreover, the use of such models have uncovered EPEC's ability to disrupt cell-cell interactions [5][7] subsequently verified by in vivo studies [8], [9]. While disruption of cell-cell interactions is an inflammatory event, human EPEC infections are normally associated with unexpectedly weak inflammation [2] thereby suggesting that the pathogen employs inhibitory mechanisms. Indeed, studies have revealed that EPEC inhibits Nuclear Factor κB (NF-κB) function - responsible for inducing the expression of anti-microbial and inflammation-related molecules - before barrier function is disrupted [10].

Host cell detection of foreign antigens (by Toll-like receptors; TLR) and cytokines (such as TNFα and IL1β by TNFR and IL1R, respectively) triggers a cascade of phosphorylation and ubiquitination events leading to IKK (Inhibitor of KappaB kinase) complex activation [11][13]. The activated IKK complex, composed of two kinases (IKKα, IKKβ and a regulatory subunit (NEMO/IKKγ), phosphorylates IκB (Inhibitor of κB) to induce its proteasomal-dependent degradation thereby releasing NF-κB for import into the nucleus to transcribe genes [14]. NF-κB function is regulated through many mechanisms including IκB re-synthesis, modification of NF-κB (or accessory factors) and altering NF-κB access to promoters [13][15]. In addition, NF-κB activity can be regulated at the level and/or function of signalling pathway components that includes kinases, phosphatases, ubiquitin ligases, de-ubiquitinases and adaptor proteins [13], [16][18]. TLR, IL1R and TNFR signalling to the IKK complex depends on TNFα Receptor-Associated Factor (TRAF) adaptor proteins and TGFβ-Activating Kinase 1 (TAK1) with pathway-specific components including kinases such as Receptor-Interacting Protein1 (RIP1) and adaptors such as Myeloid Differentiation primary response gene (88) (MyD88) [13], [18][20](see Fig. 1).

Fig. 1. EPEC T3SS-dependent inhibition of NF-κB activity is associated with effectors targeting pathway components upstream of the IKK complex.
EPEC T3SS-dependent inhibition of NF-κB activity is associated with effectors targeting pathway components upstream of the IKK complex.
HeLa cells were co-transfected with vectors encoding luciferase under the transcriptional control of NF-κB and the indicated components of the TNFα (A) and IL1R/TLR (B) signalling pathways. Ctrl refers to control empty vector with IKK data in A and B from the same experiment illustrating scale differences. Cells were left uninfected or incubated for 3 hours with eae (Intimin-deficient) or effector delivery-defective (T3SS) mutants prior to (A & B) assaying cellular luciferase activity or (C) processing for Western blot analysis probing for cellular levels of actin (loading control) and indicated signalling components. Fold increase in luciferase activity data is mean (+/- S.D.) of three independent experiments (done in duplicate) with significance (one-way ANOVA; *p≤0.05, ***p≤0.005) shown relative to corresponding uninfected control.

EPEC inhibition of NF-κB activity triggered by flagellin (recognised by TLR5) or cytokines (including TNFα and IL1β) in the Caco-2 small intestinal model depends on the pathogen possessing a functional effector-delivery system [10], [21]. Previous work has argued against a need for all LEE effectors, Intimin and a subset of Nle effectors (Orf3/EspG2, NleA, NleF and NleH) in this EPEC NF-κB inhibitory process thereby implicating other Nle effectors [10]. Indeed, screening programs by us and others have revealed novel NF-κB inhibitory activities for NleC and NleH with critical co-operative roles for NleE1 and NleB1 [22][29]. Here, we show that the LEE-encoded Translocated-Intimin receptor has a potent and specific Intimin-independent ability to inhibit NF-κB activation leading to the discovery of a novel inhibitory mechanism. Moreover, our work provides insights on the NleE1/NleB1 subversive process and on the possible evolution of EPEC's capacity to inhibit NF-κB activity.

Results

EPEC inhibits NF-κB activation by targeting components at or upstream of IKKα and IKKβ

EPEC requires a functional T3SS to inhibit antigens (such as flagellin) and cytokines (such as TNFα and IL1β) from activating NF-κB [10], [21]. To gain insight on the inhibitory mechanism, we examined EPEC's ability to interfere with NF-κB activity driven by plasmid-expression of TLR/IL1R and TNFR signalling pathway components (see Fig. 1). Thus, HeLa cells were co-transfected with plasmids expressing luciferase under the transcriptional control of NF-κB - via five repeats of the κB consensus promoter [30] - and specific signalling pathway components [30][32] prior to infecting with EPEC strains and quantifying luciferase cellular activity (see Materials and Methods). As EPEC can induce HeLa cells detachment [33], we employed the eae mutant (which lacks the Intimin surface protein) that, like wild type EPEC, inhibits NF-κB activity [10] but has little capacity to detach HeLa cells (Quitard et al., unpublished). The luciferase assay revealed basal NF-κB activity within uninfected HeLa cells as reported [23], with no significant change following infection with the eae or T3SS (effector-delivery defective) strains (Fig. 1A). Plasmid expression of TNFR pathway-related kinase (IKKα, IKKβ, TAK1 and RIP1) or adaptor (TRAF2) proteins increased cellular luciferase levels by 8 to 24 fold. Interestingly, the T3SS mutant inhibited increases driven by plasmid-expressed RIP-1 (Fig. 1A) supporting the presence of T3SS-independent inhibitory mechanisms in the HeLa model [28], [29]. By contrast, the eae mutant infection inhibited luciferase activity driven by plasmid-expression of all components except IKKα and IKKβ (Fig. 1A). Parallel studies on TLR/IL1R pathway components revealed another T3SS-independent inhibitory mechanism relating to MyD88 (Fig. 1B), with the eae mutant inhibiting signalling driven by plasmid-expressed TRAF6 and MyD88 (Fig. 1B). Western blot analyses verified the T3SS-dependent delivery of effectors (EspF and Tir; not shown) and plasmid-expression of examined host proteins, with the latter revealing unexpected infection-related increases in the cellular level of Flag-tagged TRAF proteins (Fig. 1C). Thus, consistent with previous studies [28], [29], EPEC infection of HeLa cells inhibits signalling to NF-κB by T3SS-independent and -dependent mechanisms. Moreover, the work implies that T3SS-dependent inhibitory mechanism(s) relates to effector(s) acting at or upstream of the IKKα/β complex.

The Translocated Intimin receptor inhibits TNFα-induced NF-κB activation

To identify Nle effectors postulated to inhibit NF-κB activity [10], putative nle effector genes [3], [4] were cloned into mammalian expression vectors and co-transfected into HeLa cells with the NF-κB luciferase reporter vector for screening. Indeed, this approach identified a NF-κB inhibitory activity for NleC leading to its definition as a zinc metalloprotease that degrades NF-κB complexes [23] as supported by independent studies [22], [24], [25]. Interestingly, inclusion of an available Tir-expressing construct [34] in the screening program indicated that this LEE effector could prevent TNFα from activating NF-κB. To investigate this putative NF-κB inhibitory activity in more detail, the tir gene was sub-cloned into pEGFP-N1 to generate a Tir-eGFP fusion protein with pEGFP-N1 serving as a negative control. Fig. 2A reveals similar basal luciferase activity in cells transfected with pEGFP or ptir-EGFP plasmids, with TNFα leading to a significant increase in NF-κB reporter activity for pEGFP, but not ptir-EGFP transfected cells. The relevance of this finding to NF-κB function was illustrated by Western blot analysis where expression of Tir-eGFP, unlike eGFP, inhibited TNFα from inducing the phosphorylation-associated activation of IKKα/β kinases and the NF-κB component, p65 (Fig. 2B). Inhibition specificity was illustrated by unaltered total cellular levels of IKKα/β and p65 proteins (Fig. 2B). Furthermore, fluorescent microscopy examinations revealed p65 within the nucleus of ∼18% of eGFP or Tir-eGFP expressing cells, with TNFα treatment increasing this to ∼70% for eGFP expressing cells but only ∼35% for Tir-eGFP expressing cells (Fig. 2C). As IL8 secretion requires NF-κB activity [35], we examined the extra-cellular levels of this chemokine (see Materials and Methods). Consistent with the luciferase NF-κB reporter data (Fig. 2A), pEGFP and ptir-EGFP transfected cells released similar basal levels of IL8, with TNFα treatment increasing IL8 secretion levels from pEGFP but not ptir-EGFP transfected cells (Fig. 2D). Thus, expressing Tir-eGFP within HeLa cells specifically prevents TNFα from transducing signals that activate NF-κB in a manner linked to a blockage in the phosphorylation-associated activation of IKK components needed to release NF-κB for nuclear import. The absence of other EPEC factors in these experiments illustrate that this novel property of the Translocated-Intimin receptor (Tir) effectors occurs independently of Intimin.

Fig. 2. Ectopically-expressed Tir is a potent inhibitor of TNFα-induced NF-κB activity.
Ectopically-expressed Tir is a potent inhibitor of TNFα-induced NF-κB activity.
HeLa cells transfected with vectors encoding eGFP or Tir-eGFP were treated (light grey shading or +) or not (dark grey shading or -) with TNFα prior to processing for (A) luciferase activity - these experiments involved co-transfection with the NF-κB reporter vector, (B) Western Blot analysis probing for total and phosphorylation-associated activated form of IKKα/β and p65 component of NF-κB, (C) microscopy-based quantification of the percentage of cells with p65 within the nucleus (counting a minimum of 50 cells in three independent experiments), and (D) secreted levels of IL8 - a NF-κB dependent gene product. Graphical data is mean (+/- S.D.) of three independent experiments (in duplicate for luciferase and IL8 assays) with significance (one-way ANOVA; *p≤0.05, **p≤0.01, ***p≤0.005, ns - not significant) shown between indicated data sets.

Tir provides Yersinia with an EPEC-like capacity to inhibit TNFα-induced IL8 secretion

To support the specific and Intimin-independent nature of the Tir inhibitory activity, studies evaluated Tir's ability to block TNFα-induced IL8 secretion following its delivery into HeLa cells by Yersinia pseudotuberculosis as previously described [34]. Importantly, the control Tir-negative Yersinia strain (which lacks most of its own T3SS-delivered effectors) failed to inhibit TNFα-induced IL8 secretion, whereas the Tir-expressing variant inhibited this process to a similar degree as EPEC-delivered effectors (Fig. 3). Western blot analyses verified Yersinia-delivery of Tir where it underwent partial host kinase-mediated modification, compared to EPEC-delivered Tir (not shown), as previously described [34]. Given that TNFα augmentation of IL8 secretion requires NF-κB activity [35], this work supports the premise that Tir (in the absence of other EPEC factors, including Intimin) possesses a potent and specific ability to prevent TNFR-induced signalling from activating NF-κB.

Fig. 3. Yersinia-delivered Tir inhibits TNFα-induced IL8 secretion to a similar extent as EPEC-delivered effectors.
<i>Yersinia</i>-delivered Tir inhibits TNFα-induced IL8 secretion to a similar extent as EPEC-delivered effectors.
HeLa cells were left uninfected (NI) or incubated with EPEC or a Yersinia pseudotuberculosis (Yop effector-deficient) strain carrying or not a Tir-encoding plasmid (ptir) prior to killing the bacteria, adding TNFα and quantifying IL8 secretion levels. IL8 data is mean (+/- S.D.) of three independent experiments (done in duplicate), with significance (one-way ANOVA; ***p≤0.005, ns - not significant) shown between indicated data sets.

Tir inhibition of NF-κB activity is associated with its targeting of the TRAF2 adaptor protein

To gain insight on how Tir inhibits TNFα-induced NF-κB activation, HeLa cells were co-transfected with plasmids encoding (i) the NF-κB luciferase reporter protein, (ii) TNFR signalling pathway components and (iii) eGFP or Tir-eGFP proteins prior to assaying cellular luciferase levels. This work revealed that Tir-eGFP, but not eGFP, inhibited luciferase activity driven by plasmid-expression of TRAF2 and RIP1, but not TAK1, IKKβ (Fig. 4A) or IKKα (not shown). Fluorescence microscopy studies were undertaken to determine the cellular location of over-expressed signalling components and to assess if Tir-eGFP expression induced detectable changes. Staining for plasmid-expressed Tir and IKK kinase proteins revealed diffuse cytoplasmic signals in contrast to cytoplasmic aggregates/clusters for the TRAF2 (Fig. 4B and Fig. S1) and MyD88 (not shown) adaptor proteins. Cytoplasmic clustering of plasmid-expressed TRAF2 has been reported [36]. Imaging of co-transfected cells revealed similar, distinct and partially-overlapping signals for Tir/IKK, Tir/MyD88 and Tir/TRAF signals, respectively (Fig. 4B and Fig. S1). Intriguingly, Tir-eGFP expression was associated with a loss of TRAF clusters (Fig. S1B) as supported by quantification studies (Fig. 4C). Thus, Tir may inhibit plasmid-expressed TRAF2 from transmitting signalling to NF-κB by inducing the disaggregation and/or degradation of activation-associated clusters.

Fig. 4. Tir inhibition of NF-κB activation is associated with Tir targeting TRAF proteins.
Tir inhibition of NF-κB activation is associated with Tir targeting TRAF proteins.
(A) HeLa cells were co-transfected with vectors encoding luciferase under the transcriptional control of NF-κB and indicated components of the TNFR pathway prior to quantifying cellular luciferase levels. Ctrl refers to control empty vector. Fold increase in luciferase activity data is mean (+/- S.D.) of three independent experiments (done in duplicate) with significance (one-way ANOVA; *p≤0.05, ***p≤0.005, ns - not significant) shown relative to corresponding control. In (B) HeLa cells were co-transfected with vectors encoding Tir-eGFP with either epitope-tagged IKKβ, MyD88 or TRAF2 proteins prior to fixing cells (∼24 hour post-transfection) and probing the cellular location of the plasmid-expressed proteins (using appropriate primary and different fluorescent-conjugated secondary antibodies). The host protein (Red) and Tir-eGFP (Green) signals collected from multiple serial slices through a field of view (∼20 cells) were obtained and plotted to display the degree of overlap. (C) Quantification of the percentage of HeLa cells containing Flag-tagged TRAF2 clusters in eGFP and Tir-eGFP expressing cells. Data is mean (+/- S.D.) of three independent experiments examining ∼50 cells per experiment (one-way ANOVA; ***p≤0.005).

Tir interaction with TRAF2 is associated with the proteasomal-independent degradation of the adaptor protein

To examine predicted Tir-TRAF interactions, GFP-Trap beads were used to isolate eGFP and Tir-eGFP proteins from cells co-transfected with the Flag-tagged TRAF2 expressing plasmid. Fig. 5A reveals eGFP and Tir-eGFP within input cellular extracts and their isolation by the GFP-Trap beads. While the IKKα/β proteins were present in the input pool, they did not co-isolate with eGFP or Tir-eGFP (Fig. 5A). Probing for Flag-tagged TRAF2 revealed a prominent monomer-sized band with smaller amounts of a trimer-sized TRAF species in the input pool (Fig. 5A). TRAF2 function is linked to the formation of homo- or hetero-trimers [13], [37]. Intriguingly, the minor trimer-sized TRAF2 species preferentially isolated with Tir-eGFP, though some monomer was co-isolated (Fig. 5A). This work suggests that Tir interacts (either directly or indirectly) with the activation-associated multimeric form of TRAF adaptor proteins.

Fig. 5. Tir interacts with TRAF2 to induce the latter's proteasomal-independent degradation.
Tir interacts with TRAF2 to induce the latter's proteasomal-independent degradation.
HeLa cells were co-transfected with vectors encoding (i) Flag-tagged TRAF2 and (ii) eGFP or Tir-eGFP proteins prior to (A) isolating Triton-X100 soluble host fractions - taking an ‘input’ reference sample - with the remaining pool used to isolate GFP proteins (ImmPpt) using GFP-Trap beads. In (B) and (C) HeLa cells were pre-treated with the proteasome inhibitor, MG132, before and following transfection of Tir-eGFP and Flag-tagged TRAF2 plasmids, with total cellular samples isolated 24 hr post-transfection. In (D) HeLa cells were left untransfected or transfected with pEGFP or ptir-EGFP plasmids and (24 hrs post-transfection) incubated in the presence or absence of TNFα (30 min) prior to lysis. Samples were subjected to Western blot analysis probing with anti-IKK, FLAG, GFP, TRAF2 and/or actin antibodies.

Examination of the input samples (Fig. 5A) suggested that Tir expression may decrease the cellular levels of multimeric (and perhaps monomeric) Flag-tagged TRAF2 protein (Fig. 5A). This premise was supported by demonstrating that co-expression of Tir-eGFP with Flag-tagged TRAF2 could lead to the complete loss of TRAF2 from cell extracts, while the actin loading control protein remained unchanged (Fig. 5B). As inflammatory signalling is commonly regulated by targeting components for proteasomal-dependent degradation [38], we used the proteasomal inhibitor MG132. Whilst MG132 inhibitory activity was confirmed, as per a parallel study [23], it failed to prevent the Tir-mediated loss of Flag-tagged TRAF2 proteins (Fig. 5B). Interestingly, probing the fate of endogenous TRAF2 suggested that it is not a substrate for Tir degradation, at least in cells expressing the Flag-tagged TRAF2 variant. Thus, similar levels of monomer and trimer-sized TRAF2 bands were evident in non-transfected and ptir-EGFP transfected cells (Fig. 5C) while the more prominent bands in pTRAF2-transfected cells correspond to the Flag-tagged variant (Fig. 5C versus 5B).

To investigate whether endogenous TRAF2 is a substrate for Tir-induced degradation, its fate was examined in cells that express Tir-eGFP, but not Flag-tagged TRAF2 proteins. Fig. 5D reveals that Tir expression can, in fact, induce the cellular loss of endogenous TRAF2. Interestingly, TNFα treatment of control cells reduced the level of multimeric TRAF2 with an increase in the monomer species (Fig. 5D) that, presumably, reflects intrinsic host mechanism(s) for down-regulating cytokine-induced signalling. By contrast, TNFα treatment of ptir-EGFP transfected cells produced a small pool of TRAF2 protein (monomer and trimer-sized forms; Fig. 5D) that may explain why TNFα triggered some p65 relocation to the nucleus of Tir-eGFP expressing cells (Fig. 2C). Ubiquitin-modified TRAF2 plays a key role in activating RIP1 which activates TAK1 [39] to, perhaps, explain why Tir inhibits NF-κB luciferase activity driven by plasmid-expressed RIP1 and, to a lesser extent, TAK1 (Fig. 4A). Collectively, the work implies that Tir inhibits TNFα-induced NF-κB activation by interacting (directly or indirectly) with TRAF2 - a key component of the TNFR signalling pathway - to induce its proteasomal-independent degradation.

Tir has a non-essential contributory role in enabling EPEC to inhibit TNFα-induced NF-κB activity

Previous work [10] suggested that the Tir and NleH effectors are not required for EPEC to inhibit NF-κB activity, with recent studies reporting a non-essential role not only for NleH but also NleC [22κ27]. Indeed, HeLa cells infections with a tir mutant confirmed Tir's non-essential role in inhibiting TNFα-induced IL8 secretion [10] but also revealed a small, but statistically significant defect (Fig. 6A). To examine the relationship of this defect to the absence of Tir/Intimin-mediated intimate EPEC-host cell interaction, assays were carried out with an eae (Intimin-deficient) mutant. Unexpectedly, these studies indicated that Intimin (indirectly or directly) induces NF-κB activity or suppresses effector-mediated inhibitory mechanism(s), as the eae mutant inhibited TNFα-induced IL8 secretion to a greater extent than wild type EPEC (Fig. 6A). Intimin alters host cellular processes by Tir-dependent and -independent mechanisms [40]. Infection studies with an eaetir double mutant suggest that this Intimin function relates to Tir-dependent and -independent mechanisms (Fig. 6A).

Fig. 6. Non-essential contribution of Tir in the EPEC NF-κB inhibitory process.
Non-essential contribution of Tir in the EPEC NF-κB inhibitory process.
In (A) HeLa cells were infected for 3 hrs with indicated strains prior to killing the bacteria, adding TNFα (30 minutes) and quantifying of IL8 secretion levels. Data is mean (+/- S.D.) of three independent experiments (done in duplicates) with significance (one-way ANOVA; *p≤0.05, **p≤0.01, ***p≤0.005, ns - not significant) shown between indicated pairs. In (B) HeLa cells were left uninfected or infected with indicated strains (using gentle centrifugation - 500 xg, 5 minutes - to synchronise infections) and cellular samples isolated at indicated time-points for Western blot analysis probing with anti-TRAF2 antibodies. Arrow and arrowhead, respectively, indicate monomeric and activation-associated trimeric TRAF2 forms. In (C) polarised Caco2 cells were apically-infected for 3 hours with indicated strains prior to killing the bacteria, adding TNFα (30 minutes) to the baso-lateral surface and assaying IL8 secretion levels. Data is mean (+/- S.D.) of three independent experiments (done in duplicates) with significance (one-way ANOVA; *p≤0.05, **p≤0.01, ***p≤0.005, ns - not significant) shown relative to non-infected (NI) control and between indicated pairs. Infections involved EPEC and isogenic strains lacking a functional effector-delivery system (T3SS), Tir (tir) and/or its ligand Intimin (eae) and/or the NleB1/NleE1 (nleB1/nleE1) effectors.

Interestingly, time course infection studies support a Tir-TRAF2 relationship as EPEC induced a dramatic loss in the levels of activation-associated multimeric TRAF2 proteins by a process dependent on Tir and Intimin (Fig. 6B). The Intimin-dependent nature of this event, in contrast to that mediated by ectopically-expressed Tir (Fig. 2), implies that EPEC has evolved Intimin-dependent mechanisms for regulating this Tir activity. Interestingly, other effectors appear to contribute at early time points, with the eae mutant appearing to display an augmented ability to reduce TRAF2 levels (Fig. 6B). Intriguingly, confocal microscopy studies of disease-relevant polarised cells infected with EPEC only detect Tir at the apical (surface) membrane whereas a transient pool is evident within the cytoplasm of eae mutant-infected cells (Fig. S2). This suggests that Intimin promotes Tir's rapid association with the plasma membrane, with the transient cytoplasmic pool perhaps promoting Tir-TRAF2 interactions to explain the eae mutant's Tir-dependent augmented ability to reduce the level of TRAF2 multimers and inhibit TNFα-induced IL8 secretion.

Recent studies have described a prominent role for NleE1, promoted by NleB1 or NleC, in the EPEC NF-κB inhibitory process, as nleCnleE1 and nleB1nleE1 double mutants behaved like a T3SS-defective strain, compared with partial defects for single mutants [22], [25], [28], [29]. However, we and others have described T3SS-independent inhibitory mechanisms in the employed HeLa cell models (Fig. 1) [28], [29] that may obscure the contribution of effectors (Fig. 1) [28], [29]. Thus, an nleB1nleE1 double mutant was generated and evaluated in a small intestinal model where EPEC was confirmed to inhibit NF-κB function solely in a T3SS-dependent manner [10] (Fig. 6C). Indeed, the nleB1nleE1 double mutant behaved akin to the effector-delivery defective (T3SS) strain (Fig. 6C) despite displaying no obvious defect in delivering EspB or Tir effectors (not shown). By contrast, a nleB1nleE1tir triple mutant displayed a small (significant) capacity to inhibit NF-κB function - presumably due to remaining effectors. Interestingly, while EPEC and T3SS-mutant infected cells released ∼200 and ∼800 ng/ml of IL8, respectively, in response to TNFα treatment only ∼400ng/ml was secreted from tir mutant infected cells (Fig. 6C). Whilst these IL8 values support a non-essential contributory role for Tir in the inhibitory process, the difference between EPEC- and tir-infected cell was below the significance threshold (p = 0.075). Nevertheless, this work supports the idea that the NleB1/NleE1 effectors play a central role in enabling EPEC to inhibit NF-κB activity in intestinal cells, with the non-essential novel NF-κB inhibitory activities of NleC, NleH and Tir, presumably, playing evolutionary-advantageous roles in EPEC's lifecycle.

Insights on NleB and NleE targets in NF-κB signalling

Given NleE1 and NleB1's key roles in the EPEC NF-κB inhibitory process, with only speculations on their targets [28], [29], we investigated where the blockage occurred by co-expressing them with signalling pathway components for NF-κB luciferase reporter assays. Expression of NleE1 inhibited NF-κB reporter activity driven by plasmid-expression of components from the TNFR (TRAF2, RIP1) and IL1R/TLR (TRAF6, MyD88) pathways (Fig. 7A) consistent with reports of it inhibiting NF-κB activation by multiple pathways [28], [29]. However, NleE1 failed to inhibit luciferase activity driven by plasmid-expression of TAK1 or IKK kinases (Fig. 7A) suggesting it inhibits TAK1 function to block signalling by TNFR, IL1R and TLR pathways. NleE1 may target TAK1 or factors needed for its activation, such as the TAB2/3 proteins which recruit TAK1 to ubiquitin-modified RIP1 and ubiquitin-modified TRAF6 proteins for activation in the TNFR and TLR/IL1R pathways, respectively [39]. By contrast, NleB1 inhibited luciferase activity driven by plasmid-expression of TRAF2 but not TRAF6 or IKKβ (Fig. 7B) supporting reports of it inhibiting signalling in TNFR but not TLR/IL1R pathways [28], [29]. Interestingly, NleB increased luciferase activity driven by TRAF6 suggesting that it has functions that (directly or indirectly) activate TRAF6-mediated signalling. Increases in TRAF6 signalling, despite NleB inhibition of TAK1 function (Fig. 7B), suggest that the effector may block RIP1-mediated activation of TAK1 to inhibit signalling in TNFR, but not TLR/IL1R pathways [39].

Fig. 7. NleB1 and NleE1 targets in the subversion of NF-κB activity.
NleB1 and NleE1 targets in the subversion of NF-κB activity.
HeLa cells were co-transfected with vectors encoding i) luciferase under the transcriptional control of NF-κB, ii) indicated signalling pathways components and iii) nothing (Ctrl empty plasmid), NleE1 (in A) or eGFP-NleB1 (in B) prior to assaying cellular luciferase activity. Relative luciferase activity, as percentage of control, is given as mean (+/- S.D.) of three independent experiments (done in duplicate; A) and one experiment (done in duplicate; B). In C and D, HeLa cells were transfected with Control (empty plasmid), NleE2 and/or Tir-eGFP encoding vectors prior to treating (light grey box) or not (dark grey box) with TNFα and processing for (C) luciferase activity - these experiments involved cotransfection with the NF-κB reporter vector or (D) microscopy-based quantification of the percentage of cells with p65 in the nucleus (counting a minimum of 50 cells). Data shown is mean (+/- S.D.) of three independent experiments with luciferase assays done in duplicate.

Interestingly, our screening program revealed that the NleE1 homologue, NleE2, induced NF-κB luciferase activity as effectively as TNFα(Fig. 7C) leading to a similar high level of p65 relocation into the nucleus (Fig. 7D). Indeed, both these NleE2-dependent alterations were inhibited by co-expressing Tir (Fig. 7C and 7D) suggesting that NleE2 activates NF-κB (either directly or indirectly) through a component at or upstream of Tir's target i.e. TRAF. While NleE2 is apparently not transferred into host cells [28], our finding supports the idea that EPEC effectors have features or functions that can activate NF-κB signalling and can be blocked by Tir.

Discussion

In this study we describe a new property for the most-extensively studied EPEC effector by demonstrating that the Translocated Intimin receptor (Tir) protein has a potent and specific ability to prevent HeLa cells from activating NF-κB in response to the cytokine TNFα. Whilst this discovery involved ectopic expression of Tir and an indirect NF-κB reporter assay, its relationship to transcription factor function was demonstrated by several lines of evidence. Firstly, expression of Tir-eGFP, unlike eGFP, blocked the phosphorylation-associated activation of IKKα/β and the NF-κB component, p65 - events required for the nuclear import and transcriptional activity of NF-κB, respectively [13]. Importantly, absence of these modifications was not due to cell loss as Tir-eGFP expression had no observable impact on the total cellular level of IKK kinases or p65. Secondly, epifluorescent microscopy studies revealed that TNFα treatment induced some relocation of p65 into the nucleus of Tir-eGFP expressing cells but to a dramatically less degree than eGFP expressing cells. Indeed, as expected, these Tir-mediated inhibitory events translated into a dramatic deficiency in the NF-κB dependent event [35] of TNFα-augmented increases in IL8 secretion levels. Thirdly, use of a more physiologically relevant mechanism of introducing Tir into host cells (via the T3SS of another pathogen, Yersinia) inhibited TNFα-induced IL8 secretion to a similar level as control EPEC-infected cells, whereas the Tir-negative Yersinia strain had no inhibitory capacity. Finally, epifluorescent, biochemical and co-precipitation studies unearthed an inhibitory mechanism relating to Tir interaction with and subsequent cellular loss of a key component from the TNFR signalling pathway. These data illustrate that the EPEC Tir effector has a specific and potent ability to inhibit TNFα-induced NF-κB activation.

The absence of additional EPEC factors in these ectopic and Yersinia-delivery Tir experiments illustrate the Intimin-independent nature of the NF-κB inhibitory process. Whilst over a decade of studies has re-enforced the idea that Tir's subversive activities require it to interact with the EPEC surface protein, Intimin (and, thus, Tir's need to insert into the plasma membrane to act as a receptor for Intimin) a recent study described an Intimin-independent function [41]. Our discovery of a second such activity raises the possibility that Tir possesses additional Intimin-independent functions and the need to consider their contribution to Tir's critical role in the virulence of attaching and effacing pathogens that include strains targeting humans (EPEC and enterohaemorrhagic E. coli; EHEC), ruminants (EHEC) and various small mammals.

Our work also revealed a novel mechanism for a pathogen effector to inhibit NF-κB activity as it demonstrated that Tir interacts, directly or indirectly, with TRAF2 proteins (with a preference for activation-associated multimers) inducing the proteasomal-independent loss of this adaptor protein from host cells. TRAF adaptor proteins play critical roles in signalling to NF-κB by multiple pathways including the TLR, TNFR and IL1R pathways inhibited by EPEC [10,13,19κ21]. Indeed, Tir inhibited NF-κB reporter activity driven by plasmid-expression of the TRAF2 (Fig. 4) and TRAF6 (not shown) proteins of the TNFR and TLR/IL1R pathways, respectively. Moreover, TRAF2 and TRAF5 possess functionally redundant roles in TNFR-mediated signalling to NF-κB [37] suggesting that Tir also inhibits TRAF5 activity. It is speculated that Tir can inhibit signalling through other TRAF-dependent pathways. Six of the seven TRAF members carry amino-terminal zinc-binding motifs involved in their function as E3 ubiquitin ligases for activating downstream kinases, while TRAF1 (lacks the ‘Really Interesting New Gene’ RING domain) has regulatory functions [37], [42]. Studies with a dominant-negative variant of TRAF2 [43] suggests that Tir is unable to induce its degradation (Fig. S3) implicating a need for the absent RING domain in the degradation process. There are several examples of pathogens targeting TRAF proteins, including the poxvirus MC159 protein preventing TRAF2 sequestration into a signalosome [44] and the Yersinia YopJ effector deubiquitinating TRAF2 to inhibit signalling to NF-κB [45]. The Yersinia strain used in our studies has no detectable YopJ activity (linked to a polar insertion mutation of the ypkA gene immediately upstream of yopJ; Prof Hans Wolf-Watz personal communication). As far as we are aware, the proteasomal-independent degradation of TRAF2 by Tir represents a novel pathogen-mediated mechanism for inhibiting NF-κB activity. Determining if Tir induces the cellular loss of all or a subset of TRAF members may provide insights on the breadth of cytokine- and antigen-signalling pathways it can inhibit and/or highlight conserved features involved in the TRAF interaction and/or degradation processes. Studies are underway to define the features and mechanism by which Tir induces the proteasomal-independent degradation of TRAF adaptors.

Consistent with previous findings [10], Tir was not required for EPEC to inhibit TNFα-induced NF-κB activation though infection studies revealed a small, but statistically significant inhibitory defect for a Tir-deficient strain. This defect was unlinked to Tir's role with Intimin in mediating intimate EPEC-host cell interactions, as an Intimin-deficient (eae) mutant inhibited NF-κB activity to a greater extent than EPEC. This Intimin-related activity was associated with Tir-dependent and -independent mechanisms thereby revealing a new property for this EPEC surface protein. Intriguingly, strains lacking Intimin or Tir displayed a dramatic deficiency in EPEC's ability to decrease cellular levels of activation-associated TRAF2 multimers suggesting that, in the context of an EPEC infection, Tir requires Intimin to reduce TRAF2 cellular levels. Interestingly, microscopy studies identified a transient pool of Tir within the cytoplasm of epithelia infected with the Intimin-deficient, but not wildtype EPEC strain. While Tir has been proposed to insert into the plasma membrane during the translocation process [46], it is clear that it can insert from the host cytoplasm [47], though an infection-associated cytoplasmic pool has, until now, only been supported by Western blot analyses [34], [48][50]. It appears that Tir delivery into the host cytoplasm is normally followed by its rapid (Intimin signalling-promoted) association with the plasma membrane. The extended presence of Tir within the cytoplasm of eae-mutant infected cells may promote Tir-mediated loss of activation-associated TRAF2 multimers, as supported by the time course studies (Fig. 6B), to perhaps explain the Tir-dependent increased capacity of the eae mutant to inhibit TNFα-induced IL8 secretion.

While Tir's non-essential role in the EPEC NF-κB inhibitory process, like that of NleC and NleH [22][27], could be due to functional redundancy with other effectors, this is not the case as illustrated by studies with an nleB1nleE1 double mutant. Thus, despite displaying no defect in delivering Tir into host cells, the double mutant had no significant ability to inhibit TNFα-induced IL8 secretion in HeLa or small intestinal models. This finding supports the reported key role for the NleE1/NleB1 effectors in blocking NF-κB function [25], [28], [29] and implies that the described novel NF-κB inhibitory activities of Tir, NleH and NleC effectors [22][27] (this study) are minor or transient during EPEC infections. As Yersinia-delivered and ectopically-expressed Tir proteins are potent inhibitors of TNFα-induced NF-κB activity, unlike EPEC-delivered Tir, this implies that EPEC possesses factors that suppress Tir's inhibitory function. Interestingly, ectopically-expressed Tir decreases TRAF2 cellular levels in an Intimin-independent manner (Fig. 5) while decreases mediated by EPEC-delivered Tir depend on Intimin (Fig. 6B). Ectopically-expressed (and Yersinia-delivered) Tir differs from the EPEC-delivered Tir by i) being mainly cytoplasmic ii) only undergoing partial host kinase-mediated modification and iii) failing to interact with Intimin [34] (Fig. S3). Thus, EPEC suppression of Tir's ability to decrease TRAF2 cellular levels (and presumably its ability to inhibit NF-κB activity) is linked to undefined EPEC factors enabling Tir to insert into the plasma membrane to interact with Intimin. Further studies are required to define the putative EPEC factors and mechanisms involved in this regulatory process.

Our screening program revealed NF-κB inhibitory activities for NleC [23] and Tir (this study), a NF-κB activatory function of NleE2 (this study) and confirmed inhibitory activities [22][29] for NleH (not shown), NleE1 (this study) and NleB1 (this study) effectors. By contrast, no significant NF-κB modulatory activity was evident from screening other LEE or non-LEE effectors, though it is possible that the findings included false negatives due to effector expression problems or expressing effector-fusion proteins. Indeed, our work supports the premise [22][27] that NleC and NleH inhibit NF-κB function by targeting components downstream of the IKK complex [23] (not shown), with the inhibitory activities of NleE1, NleB1 and Tir linked, respectively, to blocking the function of the TAK1, RIP1 and TRAF components upstream of IKK. Interestingly, while NleB1 inhibited signalling by TNFR pathway components, it promoted that mediated by the TLR/ILIR pathway protein, TRAF6 (but not downstream RIP1) suggesting that it has properties that induce TRAF6-mediated NF-κB activation. Indeed, the idea that EPEC effector features or properties can activate NF-κB is supported by the finding that ectopically-expressed NleE2 was as effective as TNFα at inducing p65 nuclear relocation. Interestingly, this NleE2-mediated event was blocked by co-expression of Tir suggesting that its activatory property, as per NleB1, is transmitted through TRAF proteins - a defined target of Tir to inhibiting signalling to NF-κB.

Our findings on LEE and Nle effectors, in light of published work, lend themselves to speculations on the evolution of EPEC's capacity to inhibit NF-κB. Genome sequencing projects suggest that pathogenic E. coli evolved from commensal E. coli through the horizontal-acquisition of new functions encoded on mobile genetic elements. Thus, enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC) virulence is linked to strains acquiring functional enterotoxins and an enterocyte-binding pilus [51], whilst that of EPEC is linked to the acquisition of the effector-encoding mobile genetic elements [4], [52]. As Nle effector genes are generally missing from non-pathogenic E. coli strains and require the LEE T3SS for delivery into host cells, it is reasonable to assume that the progenitor EPEC strain possessed the LEE, but not Nle-encoding genetic elements. EPEC factors (including flagella) and LEE subversive functions (eg disrupting cell-cell interactions) can activate NF-κB to induce the expression of anti-microbial and inflammatory molecules that inhibit EPEC's virulence-critical ability to colonise epithelia [10], [21]. Thus, the LEE region presumably encoded factor(s) to inhibit this event, with our screening program defining Tir as the only LEE effector with significant NF-κB inhibitory activity. Indeed, our definition of Tir-TRAF interactions within the cytoplasm to inhibit NF-κB activity may explain why Tir transits through this host compartment prior to inserting into the host membrane. It is possible that Tir's inability to completely block signalling-induced relocation of NF-κB into the nucleus (Fig. 2C) provided a selective advantage to strains acquiring mobile genetic elements expressing effectors that promote the inhibitory process (eg NleC degradation of nuclear NF-κB complexes). Undoubtedly, the key point in the evolutionary process relates to the acquisition of the NleB1/NleE1-encoding mobile genetic element (Integrative element 6; IE6) given their critical roles in blocking NF-κB activation in HeLa cells [25], [28], [29] and disease-relevant small intestinal models. This premise is supported by the nleB1nleE1 genes being among the subset of nle genes found in all sequenced LEE-encoding pathogens [52] and their presence at the 3′ end of the LEE region in some enterohemorrhagic E. coli strains [53]. It is possible that this LEE/IE6 hybrid represents a minimal genetic unit required to provide strains with EPEC-like enteric pathogenic properties.

Materials and Methods

Bacterial strains, growth condition and cell culture

These studies used nalidixic acid resistant EPEC strains, specifically wild-type EPEC (E2348/69), eae (Intimin-deficient) and espA (T3SS-deficient) isogenic strains [54], [55]. The nleB1nleE1 double mutant was generated using described standard allelic exchange procedures [56], [57] to remove (confirmed by PCR analyses) the entire gene sequence (and inter-gene region) of the adjacent nleB1 and nleE1 genes. The nleB1nleE1tir triple mutant was generated using an available tir-deletion suicide vector as described [57]. Strains were grown in Luria-Bertani (LB) broth containing nalidixic acid (25 ug/ml final conc.) from single colonies, without shaking, at 37°C in a 5% CO2 incubator overnight. The Yersinia strains and their usage was as previously described [34]. Hela cells (ATCC CCL2) were grown at 37°C with 5% CO2 in Dulbecco's Minimal Eagles Medium (DMEM) supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated foetal calf serum and 2 mM L-glutamine. Caco2 parental or TC7 subclone cells were seeded at confluence onto Transwells (Corning) and polarised over 12–15 days as previously described [5], [6].

Plasmids

Prof Luke O'Neill (Trinity College, Dublin) kindly provided plasmids relating to the NF-κB luciferase-reporter construct and expression of IKKα, IKKβ, TRAF2, TRAF6, and MyD88 [30] with those for RIP1 [31] and TAK1 [32] kindly provided by Prof's Jürg Tschopp (University of Lausanne, Switzerland) and Martin Dorf (Harvard, USA), respectively. Tir-eGFP, eGFP-NleB1, NleE1 and NleE2 proteins were expressed from pEGFP-N1 (Clontech), pEGFP-C1 (Clontech), pIRES (Clontech) and pcDNA3 (Invitrogen) vectors, respectively.

Luciferase reporter assay

Hela cells (∼2×105) seeded in 24-well plates were transfected the following day using JetPrime reagent (PEQLAB Ltd, UK) with a total amount of 250 ng DNA, comprising 100 ng of the NF-κB firefly luciferase reporter plasmid [30], 40 ng of the Renilla reniformis luciferase plasmid plus 110 ng of empty, or effector gene-containing plasmid. Levels of firefly luciferase expression were normalised against Renilla luciferase activity as a control for transfection efficiency (expressed as fold increase in luciferase activity over unstimulated control cells). When transfection efficiency was routinely found to be ∼65–80%, the Renilla luciferase plasmid was replaced with empty plasmid. High transfection efficiencies for pEGFP and/or pEGFP-tir experiments were routinely verified by visualising the eGFP signal. Twenty four hours post transfection, cells were incubated with or without TNFα (10 ng/ml) for 30 minutes, lysed in 100 µl of passive lysis buffer (Promega Ltd, Southampton, UK) for 15 minutes at room temperature with cell extracts taken for assessment of firefly luciferase activity following standard protocols and a FLUOstar Optima 413-3266 plate reader (BMG Labtech, Germany).

Infection protocols

LB grown EPEC cultures were first diluted (1∶10) in DMEM and incubated for 3 hours at 37°C in a 5% CO2 incubator. The typical optical density (OD600) was between 0.2–0.3 with infections carried out at a multiplicity of infection, MOI, of ∼100∶1. The HeLa cell medium was replaced with DMEM at least 2 hours prior to infection (routinely 3 hours unless stated otherwise), with studies on transfected cells normally 24 hours post-transfection. Yersinia YIII MEKA strains were grown in modified brain-heart medium supplemented with 20 mM MgCl2 and 5 mM EGTA at 26°C without shaking, and used for infections as previously described [34]. When appropriate, cells were incubated with bactericidal levels of gentamycin (100 µg/ml final conc.) for 1 hour prior to adding TNFα (10 ng/ml) for between 30 minutes (the routine) and up to 2 hours. EPEC infections did not induce significant cell detachment under the employed experimental conditions.

Immunoblotting

HeLa cells were washed with cold Phosphate Buffered Saline pH 7.4 (PBS) and lysed with 1% Triton X-100 in the presence of protease inhibitors (1/1000 dilution, Sigma cocktail), sodium fluoride, sodium orthovanadate and PMSF (1.2, 1.2 and 1 mM final concentration, respectively). When appropriate centrifugation (13000 x g 5 minutes) was used to separate insoluble (contains host nuclei and cytoskeleton as well as adherent bacteria) and soluble (contains host cytoplasmic and membrane proteins as well as T3SS-delivered proteins). Samples were resolved on 10% SDS PAGE, transferred onto nitrocellulose, blocked in 5% Blotto milk powder/PBS/0.02% Tween and probed with antibodies against IKKα/β (Santa Cruz), phospho IKKα/β (Cell Signaling), NF-κB p65 (Santa Cruz), phospho p65 (Ser536), TRAF2 (Cell Signaling), actin (Sigma), FLAG tag (Sigma), Myc tag (generous gift; Prof D. Mann, Newcastle University) or GFP (Zymed). Absence of reducing agents allowed the detection of TRAF2 multimeric bands. Primary antibodies were incubated overnight in a 5% bovine serum albumin (BSA)/PBS solution, washed extensively. Bound antibodies were detected using horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibodies and Super Signal West Pico chemiluminescent substrate (Pierce) with Hyperfilm ECL (Amersham Biosciences) following the manufacturer's recommendations.

IL8 secretion assay

Supernatants (0.5 ml) were taken from above the HeLa cells and assayed for the level of IL8 using an ELISA kit (DB Biosciences) following the manufacturer's recommendations.

Immunoprecipitation studies

Immunoprecipitation of Tir-eGFP was performed using GFP-Trap A beads (Chromotek) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Briefly, 24 hours post-transfection, Hela cells were lysed in RIPA buffer, centrifuged and the supernatant incubated with GFP-Trap beads for 30 minutes at 4°C. Following centrifugation, the unbound material was harvested and the beads washed before being resuspended in sample SDS buffer for Western blot analyses.

Immuno-fluorescence microscopy

Following experimentation, Hela cells seeded on glass coverslips were washed three times with PBS prior to fixing (2.5% Paraformaldhyde - Sigma - in PBS) for 30 minutes and permeabilisation of host membranes in Triton-X100/BSA (0.1% and 2.5% final conc, respectively)/ PBS solution for 30 minutes. Cells were then incubated overnight in the fridge with an appropriate primary antibody in 2.5% BSA/PBS solution, followed by multiple PBS washes and incubation with Alexa 488 or Alexa 555-conjugated secondary antibodies in a 2.5% BSA/PBS solution (1 hour; room temperature). Washed cells were mounted in DAPI-Vectashield (Vector Laboratories) and examined on a Zeiss Axioskop Epifluorescent or a Leica TCS SP2UV confocal microscopy. Nuclear p65 and TRAF clusters were counted in a semi-blind fashion i.e. slides were assessed without considering the slide order or orientation with obtained data mapped to labelling. For co-localisation studies, cells were visualised using the confocal microscope using an x63 objective lens with serial optical slices taken along the z-axis of cells within a field of view (∼20 cells), with signals analysed by Leica software and plotted to illustrate the degree of overlap.

Supporting Information

Attachment 1

Attachment 2

Attachment 3


Zdroje

1. ChenHDFrankelG 2005 Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli: unravelling pathogenesis. FEMS Microbiol Rev 29 83 98

2. NataroJPKaperJB 1998 Diarrheagenic Escherichia coli. Clin Microbiol Rev 11 142 201

3. DeanPKennyB 2009 The effector repertoire of enteropathogenic E. coli: ganging up on the host cell. Curr Opin Microbiol 12 101 109

4. IguchiAThomsonNROguraYSaundersDOokaT 2009 Complete genome sequence and comparative genome analysis of enteropathogenic Escherichia coli O127:H6 strain E2348/69. J Bacteriol 191 347 354

5. DeanPMarescaMSchullerSPhillipsADKennyB 2006 Potent diarrheagenic mechanism mediated by the cooperative action of three enteropathogenic Escherichia coli-injected effector proteins. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 103 1876 1881

6. DeanPKennyB 2004 Intestinal barrier dysfunction by enteropathogenic Escherichia coli is mediated by two effector molecules and a bacterial surface protein. Mol Microbiol 54 665 675

7. CanilCRosenshineIRuschkowskiSDonnenbergMSKaperJB 1993 Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli decreases the transepithelial electrical resistance of polarized epithelial monolayers. Infect Immun 61 2755 2762

8. MaCWickhamMEGuttmanJADengWWalkerJ 2006 Citrobacter rodentium infection causes both mitochondrial dysfunction and intestinal epithelial barrier disruption in vivo: role of mitochondrial associated protein (Map). Cell Microbiol 8 1669 1686

9. ShifflettDEClayburghDRKoutsourisATurnerJRHechtGA 2005 Enteropathogenic E. coli disrupts tight junction barrier function and structure in vivo. Lab Invest 85 1308 1324

10. Ruchaud-SparaganoMHMarescaMKennyB 2007 Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) inactivate innate immune responses prior to compromising epithelial barrier function. Cell Microbiol 9 1909 1921

11. BrownJWangHHajishengallisGNMartinM 2011 TLR-signaling Networks: An Integration of Adaptor Molecules, Kinases, and Cross-talk. J Dent Res 90 417 427

12. DoyleSLO'NeillLA 2006 Toll-like receptors: From the discovery of NFkappaB to new insights into transcriptional regulations in innate immunity. Biochem Pharmacol 72 1102 13

13. KarinMGallagherE 2009 TNFR signaling: ubiquitin-conjugated TRAFfic signals control stop-and-go for MAPK signaling complexes. Immunol Rev 228 225 240

14. IsraelA 2010 The IKK complex, a central regulator of NF-kappaB activation. Cold Spring Harb Perspect Biol 2 a000158

15. SoltLAMayMJ 2008 The IkappaB kinase complex: master regulator of NF-kappaB signaling. Immunol Res 42 3 18

16. HabelhahH 2010 Emerging complexity of protein ubiquitination in the NF-kappaB pathway. Genes Cancer 1 735 747

17. SkaugBJiangXChenZJ 2009 The role of ubiquitin in NF-kappaB regulatory pathways. Annu Rev Biochem 78 769 796

18. IhnatkoRKubesM 2007 TNF signaling: early events and phosphorylation. Gen Physiol Biophys 26 159 167

19. KobayashiTWalshMCChoiY 2004 The role of TRAF6 in signal transduction and the immune response. Microbes Infect 6 1333 1338

20. O'NeillLA 2008 When signaling pathways collide: positive and negative regulation of toll-like receptor signal transduction. Immunity 29 12 20

21. MarescaMMillerDQuitardSDeanPKennyB 2005 Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) effector-mediated suppression of antimicrobial nitric oxide production in a small intestinal epithelial model system. Cell Microbiol 7 1749 1762

22. BaruchKGur-ArieLNadlerCKobySYerushalmiG 2011 Metalloprotease type III effectors that specifically cleave JNK and NF-kappaB. Embo J 30 221 223

23. MuehlenSRuchaud-SparaganoMHKennyB 2011 Proteasome-independent degradation of canonical NF{kappa}B complex components by the NleC protein of pathogenic Escherchia coli. J Biol Chem 286 5100 5107

24. PearsonJSRiedmaierPMarchesOFrankelGHartlandEL 2011 A type III effector protease NleC from enteropathogenic Escherichia coli targets NF-kappaB for degradation. Mol Microbiol 80 219 230

25. YenHOokaTIguchiAHayashiTSugimotoN 2010 NleC, a Type III Secretion Protease, Compromises NF-kappaB Activation by Targeting p65/RelA. PLoS Pathog 6 e1001231

26. RoyanSVJonesRMKoutsourisARoxasJLFalzariK 2010 Enteropathogenic E. coli non-LEE encoded effectors NleH1 and NleH2 attenuate NF-kappaB activation. Mol Microbiol 78 1232 1245

27. GaoXWanFMateoKCallegariEWangD 2009 Bacterial effector binding to ribosomal protein s3 subverts NF-kappaB function. PLoS Pathog 5 e1000708

28. NadlerCBaruchKKobiSMillsEHavivG 2010 The type III secretion effector NleE inhibits NF-kappaB activation. PLoS Pathog 6 e1000743

29. NewtonHJPearsonJSBadeaLKellyMLucasM 2010 The type III effectors NleE and NleB from enteropathogenic E. coli and OspZ from Shigella block nuclear translocation of NF-kappaB p65. PLoS Pathog 6 e1000898

30. WietekCCleaverCSLudbrookVWildeJWhiteJ 2006 IkappaB kinase epsilon interacts with p52 and promotes transactivation via p65. J Biol Chem 281 34973 34981

31. MeylanEBurnsKHofmannKBlancheteauVMartinonF 2004 RIP1 is an essential mediator of Toll-like receptor 3-induced NF-kappa B activation. Nat Immunol 5 503 507

32. DiYLiSWangLZhangYDorfME 2008 Homeostatic interactions between MEKK3 and TAK1 involved in NF-kappaB signaling. Cell Signal 20 705 713

33. ShifrinYKirschnerJGeigerBRosenshineI 2002 Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli induces modification of the focal adhesions of infected host cells. Cell Microbiol 4 235 243

34. KennyBWarawaJ 2001 Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) Tir receptor molecule does not undergo full modification when introduced into host cells by EPEC-independent mechanisms. Infect Immun 69 1444 1453

35. KunschCLangRKRosenCAShannonMF 1994 Synergistic transcriptional activation of the IL-8 gene by NF-kappa B p65 (RelA) and NF-IL-6. J Immunol 153 153 164

36. HorieRWatanabeTItoKMorisitaYWatanabeM 2002 Cytoplasmic aggregation of TRAF2 and TRAF5 proteins in the Hodgkin-Reed-Sternberg cells. Am J Pathol 160 1647 1654

37. AuPYYehWC 2007 Physiological roles and mechanisms of signaling by TRAF2 and TRAF5. Adv Exp Med Biol 597 32 47

38. SalomonsFAAcsKDantumaNP 2010 Illuminating the ubiquitin/proteasome system. Exp Cell Res 316 1289 1295

39. AdhikariAXuMChenZJ 2007 Ubiquitin-mediated activation of TAK1 and IKK. Oncogene 26 3214 3226

40. FrankelGPhillipsADTrabulsiLRKnuttonSDouganG 2001 Intimin and the host cell—is it bound to end in Tir(s)? Trends Microbiol 9 214 218

41. DeanPMuehlenSQuitardSKennyB 2010 The bacterial effectors EspG and EspG2 induce a destructive calpain activity that is kept in check by the co-injected Tir effector. Cell Microbiol 12 1308 1321

42. ZapataJMReedJC 2002 TRAF1: lord without a RING. Sci STKE 2002 pe27

43. ZhengMMorgan-LappeSEYangJBockbraderKMPamarthyD 2008 Growth inhibition and radiosensitization of glioblastoma and lung cancer cells by small interfering RNA silencing of tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated factor 2. Cancer Res 68 7570 7578

44. MohamedMRMcFaddenG 2009 NFκB inhibitors: strategies from poxviruses. Cell Cycle 8 3125 3132

45. ZhouHMonackDMKayagakiNWertzIYinJ 2005 Yersinia virulence factor YopJ acts as a deubiquitinase to inhibit NF-kappa B activation. J Exp Med 202 1327 1332

46. ShawRKDaniellSFrankelGKnuttonS 2002 Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli translocate Tir and form an intimin-Tir intimate attachment to red blood cell membranes. Microbiology 148 1355 1365

47. CampelloneKGRankinSPawsonTKirschnerMWTipperDJ 2004 Clustering of Nck by a 12-residue Tir phosphopeptide is sufficient to trigger localized actin assembly. J Cell Biol 164 407 416

48. KennyB 2001 The enterohaemorrhagic Escherichia coli (serotype O157:H7) Tir molecule is not functionally interchangeable for its enteropathogenic E. coli (serotype O127:H6) homologue. Cell Microbiol 3 499 510

49. WarawaJKennyB 2001 Phosphoserine modification of the enteropathogenic Escherichia coli Tir molecule is required to trigger conformational changes in Tir and efficient pedestal elongation. Mol Microbiol 42 1269 1280

50. KennyB 1999 Phosphorylation of tyrosine 474 of the enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) Tir receptor molecule is essential for actin nucleating activity and is preceded by additional host modifications. Mol Microbiol 31 1229 1241

51. CrossmanLCChaudhuriRRBeatsonSAWellsTJDesvauxM 2010 A commensal gone bad: complete genome sequence of the prototypical enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli strain H10407. J Bacteriol 192 5822 5831

52. PettyNKBulginRCrepinVFCerdeno-TarragaAMSchroederGN 2010 The Citrobacter rodentium genome sequence reveals convergent evolution with human pathogenic Escherichia coli. J Bacteriol 192 525 538

53. OguraYOokaTIguchiATohHAsadulghaniM 2009 Comparative genomics reveal the mechanism of the parallel evolution of O157 and non-O157 enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 106 17939 17944

54. KennyBLaiLCFinlayBBDonnenbergMS 1996 EspA, a protein secreted by enteropathogenic Escherichia coli, is required to induce signals in epithelial cells. Mol Microbiol 20 313 323

55. DonnenbergMSKaperJB 1991 Construction of an eae deletion mutant of enteropathogenic Escherichia coli by using a positive-selection suicide vector. Infect Immun 59 4310 4317

56. KennyBJepsonM 2000 Targeting of an enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) effector protein to host mitochondria. Cell Microbiol 2 579 590

57. KennyBDeVinneyRSteinMReinscheidDJFreyEA 1997 Enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) transfers its receptor for intimate adherence into mammalian cells. Cell 91 511 520

Štítky
Hygiena a epidemiologie Infekční lékařství Laboratoř

Článek vyšel v časopise

PLOS Pathogens


2011 Číslo 12
Nejčtenější tento týden
Nejčtenější v tomto čísle
Kurzy

Zvyšte si kvalifikaci online z pohodlí domova

plice
INSIGHTS from European Respiratory Congress
nový kurz

Současné pohledy na riziko v parodontologii
Autoři: MUDr. Ladislav Korábek, CSc., MBA

Svět praktické medicíny 3/2024 (znalostní test z časopisu)

Kardiologické projevy hypereozinofilií
Autoři: prof. MUDr. Petr Němec, Ph.D.

Střevní příprava před kolonoskopií
Autoři: MUDr. Klára Kmochová, Ph.D.

Všechny kurzy
Kurzy Podcasty Doporučená témata Časopisy
Přihlášení
Zapomenuté heslo

Zadejte e-mailovou adresu, se kterou jste vytvářel(a) účet, budou Vám na ni zaslány informace k nastavení nového hesla.

Přihlášení

Nemáte účet?  Registrujte se

#ADS_BOTTOM_SCRIPTS#