Signal transduction in the protozoan host Hartmannella vermiformis upon attachment to Legionella pneumophila

2000 
Abstract Intracellular replication of the Legionnairesdisease bacterium, Legionella pneumophila, within protozoa plays a major role in bacterial ecology and pathogenesis. Invasion of the protozoan host Hartmannella vermiformis by L. pneumophila is mediated by attachment to the Gal/GalNAc lectin receptor, which is similar to the β 2 integrin transmembrane receptors of mammalian cells. Bacterial invasion is associated with induction of a protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTPase) activity in H. vermiformis that results in tyrosine dephosphorylation of the lectin receptor and several cytoskeletal proteins. In this report, we show that entry of L. pneumophila into H. vermiformis is not required to induce tyrosine dephosphorylation of one of the cytoskeletal proteins, paxillin. Tyrosine dephosphorylation of paxillin is mediated at the level of bacterial attachment to the lectin receptor, and is blocked by inhibiting bacterial attachment to the lectin receptor. Attachment of L. pneumophila to the lectin receptor is not mediated by the type IV pilus, which is one of the bacterial ligands involved in attachment to protozoa. Interestingly, the lectin receptor in resting H. vermiformis is associated with several phosphorylated proteins that are dissociated upon bacterial attachment and invasion. We show that the L. pneumophila -induced PTPase activity in H. vermiformis and the associated tyrosine dephosphorylation of host proteins can be mimicked by the cytoskeletal disrupting agent, cytochalasin D. Taken together, our data indicate that attachment of L. pneumophila to the lectin receptor of H. vermiformis induces a PTPase activity, tyrosine dephosphorylation of the lectin and cytoskeletal proteins, dissociation of the lectin from its associated phosphorylated proteins, and most probably disassembly of the cytoskeleton. This novel L. pneumophila -protozoa interaction may be a bacterial strategy to invade protozoa and to be trafficked into a replicative ′niche′, or to block differentiation of the protozoan host into a cyst in which L. pneumophila cannot replicate.
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